Sunday, August 10, 2008

monday, 11th august 2008

Isaac Hayes dies at 65:

Singer-songwriter known for 'Shaft' theme, 'South Park':

Isaac Hayes, the pioneering singer, songwriter and musician whose relentless "Theme From Shaft" won Academy and Grammy awards, has been found dead at his home.

He was 65.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

'aLi

Debut aLbum

RELEASE NATIONWIDE 08-08-08


produced and mixed by roslan aziz

all songs written by mukhlis nor

& universal music malaysia

for more go to:


"original & great, ...proof that no matter in what language, great MUSIC, will always come through".

"aLi is Global...."

....leon bernstein..... "independent music journalist, new york, new york



Holy Cash Cow, Batman! Content Is Back

Warner Brothers Pictures

Time Warner is betting its future on hot-selling films like “The Dark Knight.”

As Jeff Bewkes whittles away at the Time Warner empire, it’s become clear that the company will have unraveled the two great megamergers that created its current shape.


Published: August 9, 2008

ON an early Saturday morning about three weeks ago, Barry M. Meyer pulled a sheet of paper from the fax machine in his home office, inhaled deeply and held it up to the light of a nearby window.

Time Warner’s new C.E.O., Jeff Bewkes, is pruning the media monolith, with a focus on content over distribution.


“Entourage” is a hit show for HBO, which itself is crucial to Time Warner’s quest to dominate certain media categories “with a clear brand strategy.”

The number on the fax was eye-popping: $66 million, plus change.

Ka-ching.
The opening-day box office receipts for the Batman film “The Dark Knight” had just set a record.


And for myriad reasons — including the late Heath Ledger’s delicious turn as the Joker — the blockbuster is still filling theaters on a pace that may land it just behind “Titanic” on the list of all-time, top-grossing films.

Mr. Meyer is the chairman of Warner Brothers, the Hollywood studio behind “The Dark Knight,” and the film has had its debut at a transformative moment for his studio’s parent, Time Warner.

In an effort to focus more sharply on “content creation” (or what nonsuits still like to call movies and television shows),
Jeffrey L. Bewkes,


who became chief executive of Time Warner in January, is whittling down the company’s many branches.

It’s a makeover that will unravel about two decades’ worth of mergers that created the company in its current form, putting its trophy studio,

Warner Brothers — as well as the ups and downs of moviemaking — more directly in Wall Street’s glare.

Time Warner, initially the amalgam of the old Warner studio and the Time Inc. magazine empire, grew to include Turner Broadcasting,

America Online, a cable company and such prized cable channels as HBO.

Some analysts have had a hard time embracing this goliath as it has grown into the world’s biggest media company.

So, it turns out, have some of its executives.

“It’s always been frustrating that as well as we do, it becomes a blip on the screen,” says Mr. Meyer of Warner’s contribution to Time Warner’s overall bottom line.

“We joke that we could have the greatest year in history, and if AOL misses its advertising target by one-tenth of a percentage point, that would be the headline.”

Up or down, Warner’s performance will stand out much more starkly in the years ahead because the days of Time Warner being all things to all media are gone.

For now, Mr. Bewkes is staking the company’s future on three big content providers: Warner Brothers, Turner Broadcasting (which includes TNT, TBS and CNN) and HBO.

To ramp things up on the entertainment front, he’s also been overseeing internal discussions about acquisitions in film and television —

including a possible takeover of NBC Universal, should its parent, General Electric, decide to sell, according to executives and bankers who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose details of the discussions.

Elsewhere in the company, it’s all about downsizing.

Time Warner’s cable operation is being spun off, eviscerating the once-popular corporate notion peddled by business consultants and merger specialists that content and distribution should reside under one roof.

Mr. Bewkes is also looking to sell AOL or, more likely, find a partner like Yahoo or Microsoft to take it off his hands, leaving Time Warner with a small stake in the online company.

It is less clear how the Time Inc. unit, which publishes magazines like Time, People, In Style, Fortune and Sports Illustrated, meshes with Mr. Bewkes’s strategy.

According to Time Warner insiders, the company is likely to shrink the publishing unit to just a handful of the most profitable titles.

Some analysts predict that Time Warner might try to sell the publishing unit en masse, but only if market conditions improve.

What is clear is that Mr. Bewkes is tethering his fortunes to companies that are juggernauts in their respective industries and are sprawling, global brands.

They also represent the antithesis of the notion that content for the masses is passé, and that popular culture has devolved into narrow niches and user-generated fare like video clips of bulldogs riding skateboards.

Get ready then, says Mr. Bewkes, for global fireworks.

“Around the world, the consumption of entertainment products is growing rapidly,” he says.

“The question is how do you offer it, and how do you get paid for it?”

THE troika that Mr. Bewkes prizes faces distinct challenges.

HBO is under constant pressure to remain a cultural tastemaker by finding new fare to replace hits like “The Sopranos” and “Sex and the City,”
while Turner Broadcasting’s cable stable is susceptible to the vagaries of advertising and viewers who are increasingly watching video online.

For its part, Warner has to produce movies and television shows at a time when it is harder —

though not impossible (see “The Dark Knight”) — to attract large audiences.
This is compounded by the fact that the industry’s engine of growth, DVD sales, has slowed to a near standstill.

(Warner executives are quick to point out that DVD sales haven’t fallen off the cliff, however, as some analysts had predicted.)

Mr. Bewkes describes Time Warner’s new raison d’ĂȘtre as “dominating niches with a clear brand strategy.”

“HBO today means ‘Entourage,’ ‘Big Love,’ ‘Flight of the Conchords’ and the coming ‘True Blood,’ ” he says.

“There are 10 subniches below the brand.

And inside Warner Brothers are a bunch of brands — Harry Potter, Batman, ‘Two and a Half Men’ and so forth.”

But if Time Warner’s long-languishing share price has been driven by the ups and downs — mainly downs — of AOL, is it any better to have the fickle nature of the world’s moviegoing populace drive the share price?

“The investor world that looks at studios as part of media companies will say that the studio business is supposed to be erratic,”

Mr. Bewkes says. “Not at our company. Not at Time Warner.”

Among the three units that Mr. Bewkes is betting the shop on, Warner is by far the biggest revenue generator.

For the 2007 fiscal year, Time Warner’s film division — including New Line Cinema, which this year was folded into Warner Brothers — generated $11.7 billion in revenue.

Turner and HBO, which Time Warner lumps together in its financial reports, generated $10.3 billion.

The profit picture is slightly different, because cable networks have much higher margins.

Last year, Warner Brothers earned about $1.2 billion in operating income, compared with about $3.4 billion for HBO and Turner combined.

When Time Warner reported second-quarter earnings on Wednesday, Warner and the cable networks were the fastest-growing units.

Overall revenue grew just 5 percent, but Warner was up 14 percent and the cable networks were up 9 percent.

AOL and Time Inc. posted declines.

For Mr. Bewkes and his team, the core of the strategy is a wager that the media pendulum will swing away from distribution and back toward content.

“The last number of years, all you have heard about is new and better ways to distribute content,” says Mr. Meyer,

sitting in his office on Warner’s lot in Burbank, Calif.

“At some point, I think distribution gets commoditized,” leaving, he says, content as the more valuable component.

He points at a television screen in his office.
“At the end of it all,” he says, “it’s just a blank screen.”

True, to a point.

But look at the music industry and ask yourself who has made more money from the digital revolution:

Apple from selling iPods, or the record labels from digital song sales?

Despite the proliferation of devices that threaten to make content a commodity —
and have already arguably done so with music — there are others besides Mr. Bewkes who see growing content opportunities on the horizon.

“While we are in a period of transition, there has never been a better time to be in the content business,” Philippe P. Dauman,

the chief executive of Viacom, said in a recent conference call with Wall Street analysts.

Among media companies, Viacom, which includes the Paramount film studio and MTV Networks, is the clearest parallel to what Time Warner is now becoming.

THE Warner lot in Burbank is a 110-acre mill of popular entertainment.

Now 85 years old, it has long had a place in the fabric of Americana.

A lengthy, soon-to-be-published coffee table book about the studio’s history,

“You Must Remember This: The Warner Brothers Story,” along with a PBS series, will open the annals for movie buffs.

The book’s author, Richard Schickel, is a movie critic who has also produced television documentaries on Warner directors.

Those projects spawned the book.

Warner’s story “is crucial to the history of American movies, even to American social and cultural history —

that is to me unbreakable,” Mr. Schickel writes in the book’s introduction.

Indeed, Warner has long been considered one of the most stable and durable of the major studios —

and largely devoid of Hollywood histrionics.

“These are honest and decent people who keep their word with both the business and creative communities,” Mr. Bewkes says.

While Warner is most closely associated with movies, the production of television shows for major broadcast networks and cable channels in some years makes up half the studio’s profits.

The bulk of Warner’s revenue, though, comes from movies.

On the television side, where the most lucrative franchise right now is the CBS show “Two and a Half Men,” revenue is about $4 billion, compared with close to $7 billion from motion pictures.

Although no one denies the shifting media landscape and the enormous degree to which new technologies and the Internet are disrupting it,
the revenue that Warner draws from distributing shows or movies on the Web is minuscule and is likely to remain tiny for some time.

Yet digital growth is all the rage on Wall Street.

“I probably spend three-quarters of my time talking about things that are about 10 percent of our business,” Mr. Meyer complains.

That’s partly because many analysts regard Warner’s traditional businesses as mature, and therefore hard to expand.

“We are facing a marketplace where consumer spending is relatively flat,” said Kevin Tsujihara, president of Warner Brothers Home Entertainment.

“Our challenge is in how we go about improving margins in this environment.”

He says Warner’s answer is to convert the DVD rental business, still a roughly $7.5-billion-a-year business for the entire industry, to video-on-demand, or V.O.D., services, which now amount to only about $1.2 billion annually.

But the margins are juicy and likely to become even more so.

Studios get about 20 cents on the dollar per DVD rental.

Their take on a V.O.D. sale is about 60 cents to 70 cents on the dollar.

“Even if you get modest growth, you can grow the margins, which help the most important line, which is the bottom line,” Mr. Tsujihara says.

Warner executives say demand for American entertainment is growing globally as well.

In television, consider this: in Germany five years ago, the only American series in prime time was the 1980s show “Quincy.”

Today, “Monk,” “CSI: Miami” and “House” all reside in German prime time.

Digital piracy is also forcing studios to make shows available sooner in international markets.

In Singapore, for example, Warner will offer “Gossip Girl” a day or two after it shows in the United States, compared with the usual lag of six months.

“Audiences are watching shows that are in the zeitgeist online as early as a day after the U.S. telecast on sites where people have posted them illegally,” said Jeffrey R. Schlesinger, head of international television.

International distribution is paying more these days: a few years ago, a typical show’s international revenue was about $500,000 an episode; today it is closer to $1 million.

And as a percentage of television revenue, international represents 20 percent, compared with 15 percent five years ago, according to Bruce Rosenblum, president of the Warner Brothers Television Group.

For 17 of the last 22 years, Warner has been the top seller of television shows to the four major broadcast networks, despite not owning a network itself.

In 1995, the government repealed rules that prevented networks from owning and producing their own television shows, and Warner has been in competition with networks’ production houses ever since.

“Our job is to be the second-favorite supplier of shows to each of the networks,” Mr. Rosenblum says.

“All of our competitors have the advantages of owning television stations.”

It is this dynamic, in part, that could drive Time Warner to buy NBC Universal. G.E. has consistently said it plans to retain its TV and movie unit, but many in the industry say they would not be surprised if, after the Olympics — now on NBC — G.E. explores alternatives.

A recent analysis published by Michael Nathanson, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, found that the share of independent programs (meaning not produced internally) on networks dropped to just 21 percent this year from 42 percent in 2006.

“Nonaligned third-party TV studios like Warner Brothers and Sony appear to have an increasingly harder time finding homes for their programs,” Mr. Nathanson wrote in his report.

That insight isn’t lost on Warner executives.

“In television, we have to be better than the other guys because the networks would prefer to buy from their own production companies,” Mr. Meyer says.

Although ratings for networks have declined, they are still the best place to break a new show.

“For the next number of years, access to a big network is irreplaceable,” he says.

FOR such a big, ambitious movie, “The Dark Knight” had a small-town theatrical birth.

Its world premiere was in Montpelier, Vt. — several days before a glitzier coming-out party on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

The premiere’s site was chosen because of a friendship between Mr. Meyer and Senator Patrick J. Leahy, a Vermont Democrat.

It was a week before the movie was released more broadly, and Mr. Meyer and other executives were nervous about preventing a leak to file-sharing sites on the Internet that could undermine its theatrical debut and the studio’s profits.

People patrolled the aisles of the Capitol Theater in Montpelier, wearing night-vision goggles to detect hand-held camcorders.

(No one was nabbed.)

In fact, the antipiracy efforts before the release of “The Dark Knight” were so tough that Mr. Meyer himself couldn’t bring a DVD copy home to watch a rough cut.

When a copy of the film didn’t make it to the Web until 38 hours after its debut — Warner tracked a grainy camcorder copy to a theater in the Philippines — it was seen as a triumph.

Those 38 hours, as well as Warner’s tactic of discouraging downloaders by flooding file-sharing sites with fake copies of the film after pirated copies surfaced, probably saved the company millions in lost ticket sales.

“With a movie like this, where the audience is technologically savvy, the threat and potential cost of piracy is huge,” says Mr. Tsujihara,

who also oversees antipiracy efforts at the studio.

THOSE efforts underscore how important protecting intellectual property is to Mr. Bewkes’s overall strategy.

Because of the difficulty of aggregating an audience — consider the decline of broadcast television ratings in recent years — a big movie like “The Dark Knight” is all the more valuable.

“You just have to look at the box office numbers,” said Jeff Robinov, president of the Warner Brothers Pictures Group.

“It’s more challenging to grab that audience.

But when it works, like with Batman, it extends to all areas of the company.”

A few years ago, Mr. Bewkes, along with other media executives, attended a session at the Museum of Television and Radio in Los Angeles,
during which a group of computer hackers demonstrated how easy it was to find first-run movies on the Internet.

When the assemblage went to lunch, Mr. Bewkes stayed behind to chat with the hackers.

“They said they didn’t feel bad about piracy becaus

e of all the money studios make,” Mr. Bewkes recalls.

“I said,

‘Let me tell you what we make.’

And I said, ‘Here’s the percentage.’

They said, ‘We’ll pay for movies if you give it to us the right way.’ ”

In the future, the “right way” is likely to mean making movies available on every platform — theater, DVD, V.O.D. and on the Internet —

either at the same time or with a smaller window following a theatrical release.

But until technology forces Hollywood’s hand —

Mr. Bewkes suggested that it would take three to five more years before high-definition videos are delivered conveniently over the Internet — the industry will retain its grip on sequential windows of release.

“Warner Brothers is staunchly and adamantly supportive of preserving the theatrical window,” said Alan Horn, president and chief operating officer of Warner Brothers Entertainment,
mentioning a statistic he had read indicating that 17 percent of people who had seen “The Dark Knight” had gone back a second time.

“I wonder how many of those would have gone out and bought the DVD instead of seeing it again at the theater.”

The future, most agree, is seamless distribution of films to television using Internet technology.

But the big question facing Hollywood is, how far off is that future?

That transition will be, and is, wrenching because studio executives must walk a fine line between preserving the traditional business, which still amounts to a vast majority of revenue and profits, and experimenting with new ways of distribution.

That experimentation often puts studios at odds with longtime retail partners —

the biggest of which is Wal-Mart Stores — and theater owners.

Some are already doing it.

Sony recently announced that it would offer its Will Smith movie “Hancock” directly to consumers who have an Internet-enabled Sony Bravia television, at the same time that the film is released on DVD.

“Management’s biggest challenge is transitioning into this brave new world without trampling the massive revenue streams that have supported our businesses for so long,” Mr. Meyer says.

MR. BEWKES ultimately will be judged by how much of a boost he gives to Time Warner’s torpid stock price.

On the Monday after “The Dark Knight” opened and set a record, Time Warner stock closed down 51 cents, suggesting that Wall Street still hasn’t made up its mind.

On Friday, the shares closed at $15.60, down nearly 20 percent from their 52-week high of $19.42.

“So ‘Dark Knight’ comes out and it has a calculable earnings lift and the stock doesn’t move because the Street factors in something else,” Mr. Bewkes says.

In this case, he says, that something else is worries about the impact that Verizon’s television service, FiOS, might have on Time Warner Cable.

“It’s hard for investors to balance the pros and cons of dissimilar businesses,” Mr. Bewkes says, adding that once Time Warner’s cable unit is spun off, investors will have an easier time valuing the parent company.

And that, of course, brings Mr. Bewkes back to his central point: in a digital age, content becomes more valuable, not less, because it’s becoming cheaper to deliver.
“The production of media content is a rapidly growing category,” Mr. Bewkes says.

“Is that a good and promising thing for us?

Yes.”

Saturday, August 9, 2008

sunday, 10th august 2008

Comic Mac Dead at 50

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

By Jeffrey Jolson and AP

(Hollywood Today)

8/09/08 —

Chicago comic Bernie Mac died early Saturday morning from complications due to pneumonia, his publicist confirmed.

Mac, 50, had been hospitalized for about a week at Northwestern Hospital, according to his spokeswoman.

A few years ago, Mac disclosed that he suffered from sarcoidosis, a rare autoimmune disease that causes inflammation in tissue, most often in the lungs.

The comic born Bernard Jeffrey McCullough could cut an imposing figure.

He stood six-foot-three, was built like a fullback and carried himself with a bouncer’s reticence.

But perhaps the strongest weapon in the Chicago comedian’s arsenal was that voice, that amalgam of thought and a delivery that could rise like a tidal wave, outpace a Gatling gun and remained, to his last days, loud and unapologetic.

He wasn’t scared, he told us time and again, to tell anyone what he thought, to say what others were afraid to say.

That fearlessness wasn’t always welcome, considering Mac didn’t get his big break until his 30s.

His family thanks everyone for the well wishes and concern.”

Saturday, August 9th, 2008

By Jody Babydol Gibson

HOLLYWOOD, CA

(Hollywood Today)

8/8/08 —

This week the scandal of the year reared its ugly head when Democratic hopeful Senator John Edwards admitted publicly that the he did have an affair with 44-year old Rielle Hunter, but said that he did not love her.

Edwards also denied he was the father of Hunter’s baby girl, Frances Quinn, although the one-time Democratic Presidential candidate said he has not taken a paternity test.

Yet- that is.

Those “tabloid lies” as he calls them may have now become tabloid truths.

Clearly, Edwards is not the first in a long line of government officials who have fallen from grace;

we are still mumbling over former Attorney General Elliot Spitzer who earlier this year was forced to resign as Governor of New York due to an extra marital sexual liaison with a prostitute.

We can’t help but wonder- do men in government feel they are above the law?

In his own words Edwards admits “I began to feel that I was something special”;

perhaps the word special can be construed as “privileged” especially coming from the man who threw us all in a tizzy when flying in for his $400 haircut.

But Edwards did not break the law albeit a moral one.

Or is he being hit below the belt.

We are not privy to the marital woes of John and Elizabeth Edwards;

nor do we have access to the skeletons in their marital closet.

It is no secret Elizabeth’s brave battle as a cancer survivor is enough of a cross to bare;

but how do we know the way in which they chose to deal with it?

It is not implausible to assume that her unfortunate health issues have left a very handsome young John Edwards without any intimacy or sexual outlet whatsoever.

Other men having been in a similar situation have actually received permission from their wives who understood the pain and loneliness of supporting a loved one without the love,

and it is not unusual for an understanding wife who realizes the hardships involved to allow her husband the affair as long as its carried out in a discreet fashion keeping it far from their personal lives at home.

You know the saying- “don’t judge a man until you’ve walked in his shoes.”

Given the fact that might even mean the dawn of John Edwards’ political career, perhaps his walk includes a very heavy load…One hopes not, but how could one foresee this?

Jody Babydol Gibson’s recently authored book “Secrets of a Hollywood Super Madam” caused headlines around the world.

more....sat 8th august 2008


Friday, August 8th, 2008
One of biggest reunion tours suddenly calls it quits after breaking box office success
By Jeffrey Jolson

HOLLYWOOD, CA (Hollywood Today)

8/8/08 —

The Police announced their remarkable reunion was over, last night at Madison Square Garden, capping a 151-show tour that will finish with $358 million at the box office.

Sting, Stewart and Andy said they were calling quits at the NY gig.

Billboard confrirming theirs was the third highest all time tour at $350 million-plus

It was an odd day to make news, with the opening of the Olympics, Russian states shooting down aircraft and former Presidential candidate John Edwards challenging adultery accusations.

Yet the final concert by the Police made headlines in the “The New York Times,” who said “it was a victory lap, a spectacle, a backward glance, an amen.”

We love and appreciate the 80s trio, but just cannot consider them God-like


The Week in Sex & Scandal: Paris, Eva,

Disney dodges a bullet, Eva nipple censored, Paris for Prexy

By Jody Babydol Gibson

HOLLYWOOD, CA (Hollywood Today) 8/7/08 –EVA’S BREASTS

Gas prices are giving us pain at the pump, IndyMac’s breaking the bank, our homes are in foreclosure, and now they’re not letting us see gorgeous Eva Mendes’s nipple too?
That does it! What is the world coming to?!

Apparently, Calvin Klein who brought us Marky Mark’s abs along with the big bulge in his underwear during those earlier controversial billboard ads is making news again with his new televised commercial for Obsession perfume which has the networks in such an uproar they have it banned in some places!

The ad features a luscious Eva sprawled out on the bed in a sexy negligee and just when you think you’ve seen it all out comes Eva’s nipple!

I say bring it on.

Paleez!

Americans are under enough pressure trying to get through the John McCain ads- don’t take Eva’s nipple away from us too!

Maybe the sponsors will shed some mercy on us and agree to show it after 10pm when the little ones are asleep…

PARIS’ POSSE

Who is writing Paris Hilton’s material?
! Move over Tina Fey- you’ve got some competition.


“I’ll see you at the debates, bitches,” she said to U.S. presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama, according to Reuters.

Paris gets an A+ for marketing and let’s face it guys she looked hot, hot, hot announcing her candidacy in a revealing one piece leopard suit.

This week the talk was Paris Hilton’s commercial with a satirical attempt to ingratiate herself into the political arena and her opening line
“Some white haired dude featured me in his commercial so I guess that means now I’m in the race” was absolutely priceless!

And of course the added mention of “But I’ll just have to change the White House pink” had me on the floor!

Rumor has it her mom is the one who writes a lot of her material which at the very least is not only scandalous, but so very, very Paris!

Watch out Mad TV someone’s got a director’s chair with your name on it!

Friday, August 8, 2008

sat, 8 August 2008



BERNIE BRILLSTEIN DIES AT 77;


PIONEERING MANAGER HAD AN EYE FOR TALENT:

Bernie Brillstein, pioneering manager and producer whose keen eye for talent led him to steer the careers of such stars as John Belushi and Jim Henson, has died.

He was 77.

Brillstein had been suffering from complications stemming from double-bypass heart surgery in February.

A one-time WMA agent, Brillstein headed Hollywood's most successful management company in the 1980s and in the '90s in partnership with Brad Grey, now chairman and CEO of Paramount Pictures.

Clients whose careers were nurtured at Brillstein-headed shingles also included such biz heavyweights as Lorne Michaels, Gilda Radner, Dan Aykroyd,

Brad Pitt, Adam Sandler, Geena Davis, Martin Short, Jim Belushi, Dabney Coleman, Dana Carvey, Dennis Miller, Nicolas Cage, Rob Lowe and Jay Tarses.

LBN-MEDIA INSIDER:

***The Olympics which kick off Friday are bringing in over $1 billion in revenue to NBC Universal.

LBN-NOTICED:

***Long-time CAA communications department executive Michael Mand having lunch yesterday at La Scala in Beverly Hills.

***Renowned actor Jon Voight having lunch at the Beverly Glen Deli near Mulholland.







LBN-SEE IT...
Performers dance around a giant scroll during the opening ceremony for the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Friday, Aug. 8, 2008.

LBN-DID YOU KNOW:
***The game Simon Says was originally called Do This, Do That.
***The bark of the giant sequoia can be up to 2 feet thick.
***Vince Lombardi coined the term "game plan."
***The founder of Kodak, George Eastman, hated having his picture taken.
***Johnny Carson, Michael Douglas, and Clint Eastwood were all once gas station attendants.

LBN-QUOTE:
"Don't matter how much money you got, there's only two kinds of people: there's saved people and there's lost people."
--Bob Dylan.

LBN-HISTORY:
On Aug. 8, 1974, President Richard Nixon announced he would resign following damaging revelations in the Watergate scandal.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Friday,8 august 2008

Live Nation Posts Q2 Revenue Increase


August 07, 2008 -


By Mitchell Peters, L.A.Live Nation has reported a second-quarter net income of $1.2 million, or 2 cents per share, down from a net profit of $9.9 million, or 15 cents a share, during the same period last year.

Revenues at the Los Angeles-based company rose 18% to $1.16 billion from $986.3 million.

"We are pleased to report that the live music industry remains healthy, particularly given the continued economic slowdown that has impacted so many consumer-oriented business,"
Live Nation president/CEO Michael Rapino said today (Aug. 7) during a call with investors."

As expected, concert attendance and per head revenue has held up very well, and the pace of ticket sales remains robust in the current quarter.

"Live Nation produced more than 5,800 concerts during the second-quarter, up 42% from last year, according to Rapino.

Attendance jumped 14% to 13.7 million, and total revenue per fan rose 6% to $82.18.

Sponsorship revenue declined to $44.7 million from $44.9 million.

The company executed 623 sponsorship deals during the quarter, and is on track to close more than 1,000 deals in 2008, Rapino said.

Revenues in Live Nation's North American Music division grew 33% to $619.7 million, while its International Music segment increased 12.5% to $377.2 million.

As reported earlier, the company's amphitheater season weathered an iffy economy in the first half of the year, and managed to post some improved numbers.

Per-show attendance through July at North American amphitheaters this year, the overwhelming bulk of which are owned and/or operated by Live Nation, is 9,109, up 1,360 people per show over last year, according to Billboard Boxscore.

Meanwhile, Rapino said that Live Nation remains confident in its summer concert schedule, noting that Madonna's fall tour has already sold 1.3 million tickets.

"We continue to believe this tour will be Madonna's biggest ever, with the potential of grossing over $240 million in total revenues," he said.

Coldplay's summer tour is 90% sold out, Rapino said, noting that other Live Nation tours include New Kids on the Block, Jonas Brothers, Journey, John Mayer and Rascal Flatts.

Moving to Live Nation's latest batch of multirights deals, Rapino said the company's 10-year agreement with Nickelback expects to generate more than $700 million in revenue.

And its 10-year partnership with Shakira could generate more than $800 million in revenue.

"These deals put us on track in meeting our goals of signing a total or four to six major artists to a long-term, multiple-rights deal in 2008," he said.

As Live Nation prepares to launch its own ticket platform in 2009, the company's in-house ticketing sales increased 74% to $7.3 million during the second quarter.

Through its existing relationship with Ticketmaster, Live Nation is allowed to sell 10% of its tickets through a "registered fan club mechanism," according to Rapino.

"We've got full staffing in place in all of our venues and box-offices," he said, adding that Live Nation has done ticketing for Bonnaroo and Pemberton festivals.

"We're fully on track on execution, costs and transition, and see no stumbling blocks right now."


Who Needs a Record Label in the Modern Age?

HyperDiy are the worlds first 'Record label replacement service' allowing bands access to facilities traditionally associated with having a record deal, but for fixed, modest fees and taking not one % in royalties from the artist.

Aimed at artists, bands and small labels. HyperDiy can handle anything from simple online distribution to a full campaign including Videos and radio plugging and a number of ever expending territories around the world.
London, UK (Billboard Publicity Wire) August 7, 2008 -- HyperDiy Media, a new kind of 'Record Label Replacement Company', are offering a range of services to replace the old-fashioned style record deal.

The aim is to allow new bands to have a chance at getting their music heard by the public at large, without having to wait to be discovered by the increasingly tight and inward looking circles of the music Industry.

"A lot of bands and artists feel that it's hard to get any interest from record labels due to the state most labels are in, they all seem to be playing it very safe." said Richard, the companies Managing Director. Dawn Firth, the CEO added

"A lot of people think it's impossible to have a successful music career without a label, but there's a lot of talented bands and artist's out there who just haven't been lucky enough to get the breaks".

HyperDiy's aim is to provide the tools to level the playing field.

For a range of low one off fees, artists can have HyperDiy handle everything that a traditional label would handle for the band.

Artists are able to select several individual services such as distribution, mastering, PR, Video Production and online support or to select from a number of packages which combine a number of the above for reduced rates.

The best part is that any revenue the band makes from their record sales goes back to the band, with HyperDiy not taking one single percent from their profit.

Also, HyperDIY does not have an A&R policy.

"We aren't here to judge," added Dawn

"We always believed that it is for the public to decide- so often the labels get it wrong!"

Many of the packages can be paid for over time and even if, in these recessional times, an artists finds he can't quite afford the services, Dawn and Richard urge artists to get in touch.

"We aren't some faceless major, contact us for a chat and we'll see how we can help" says Dawn.

HyperDiy also provide a FREE press release and monthly advice wire to anyone who signs up to their mailing list, just go to their site, click where advertised and fill in your details, then they will get your press release out far and wide.

So if you are asking yourself, 'Who needs a record label?" go to HyperDiy Media and see what they have to offer.
HyperDiy Media- As Featured in the Unsigned Guide 3rd Edition

WMG Narrows Losses In Q3 August 07, 2008


Global

By Andre Paine,


LondonWarner Music Group has released third-quarter earnings figures which show its losses narrowing and digital revenues continuing to grow.

WMG announced revenues of $848 million today (Aug. 7), an increase of 5% compared to the same quarter last year, but 1% down on a constant-currency basis.

The major made a net loss of $9 million or $0.06 per share for the third quarter, compared to a $17 million loss in Q3 in 2007.

The losses were smaller than analysts’ estimates, while revenues exceeded expectations.

Digital revenue for the period was $166 million, representing 20% of total revenues.

That value was a 1% rise on Q2 in 2008 and up 39% compared to the same quarter last year.

It also represents 22.7% of WMG’s recorded music revenue, but the New York-based company says this was not enough to offset declines in physical sales.

“This quarter, we continued to outperform our competitors, even in the midst of a challenging recorded music environment,” says chairman and CEO Edgar Bronfam in a statement.

“We continue to advance our strategy to lead the recorded music industry’s transition with new business models, key partnerships and successful A&R investments.

As we transform the business to position it for future growth in an evolving industry, we remain focused on driving profitability and cash flow, while prudently managing capital and costs.

”Revenue from recorded music increased 5.1% from the prior-year quarter to $686 million, down 1% on a constant currency basis.

However, there was a fall of 7.5% in U.S. recorded music revenue to $319 million, while revenues outside the U.S. increased 19.2% to $367 million.

The company says major sellers included Madonna, Disturbed, Plies, Luis Miguel and Frank Sinatra.

Music publishing revenue was flat domestically but an 11.1% increase in revenues from international markets ensured a 7% overall increase from the previous Q3 to $168 million.

WMG says that was achieved despite a 14.3% decline in mechanical rights revenues compared to the same period last year, reflecting the decline in physical record sales.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Wed, 6th August 2008

42 Things About the L.A. Times

Departing 18-year L.A. Times staffer William Lobdell recounts a few things folks who still work at newspapers should keep in mind going forward:

3. But the business model for newspapers is broken.

4. No one has figured out how to fix it.

5. That’s probably because it can’t be fixed.

6. The smaller the newspaper, the longer its life span in print (four exceptions: the New York Times, Wall St. Journal, Washington Post and USA Today).

7. Technology has run laps around the print media — giving readers instant news, open-source journalism, no barriers to become publishers, and an infinite news hole.

8. The idea that your daily news is collected, written, edited, paginated, printed on dead trees, put in a series of trucks and cars and delivered on your driveway — at least 12 hours stale — is anachronistic in 2008.

9. As a friend told me last week, “Bro, face it. You guys are the 8-track cassette of news.”

HarperCollins will publish Lobdell's memoir, Losing My Religion: How I Lost My Faith Reporting on Religion in America, in February.

Lobdell will continue to write a religion blog.


Posted on: August 4th, 2008

bumpshack


Actress Eva Mendes stars in a new perfume ad for Calvin Klein that has been banned from American TV for exposing Eva’s nipple as she rolls around naked under a sheet according to Gawker.

“You must be kidding me.

This country really needs a new president — this country is so messed up,” said Baron.

“It’s such a joke and it’s quite upsetting, frankly, how hypocritical this country has become.

It’s OK for children to see people killed by guns?

Spreading a little love right now would be a good idea.

“She is being a little sexy, but they are not provocative,” added Baron.

“They are really well done.

The spot is really beautiful — I really can’t believe this is happening.…I don’t know what else to say.”

So it seems that creative director Fabien Baron might be a bit European wouldn’t you say.

Maybe CK needs a new creative director.

In the video Eva is rolling around naked in bed covered only by a sheet.
As if this took all that much creativity and hasn’t been done a hundred times over.

The best it was ever done was in the Faith Hill video for ‘Breath’ from several years ago.

"Dark Knight" Breaks Another Record

In this image released by Warner Bros., Heath Ledger stars as The Joker in "The Dark Knight."

(AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures)

LOS ANGELES —


Add another entry for "The Dark Knight" in Hollywood's record books:

The Batman sequel has climbed past $400 million at the box office in just 18 days, the fastest pace ever, a studio executive said Tuesday.

As of Monday, "The Dark Knight" had taken in $400.04 million domestically, according to distributor Warner Bros.

Jeff Goldstein, general sales manager for Warner, said the film hit that mark in less than half the time it took for the previous record-holder, "Shrek 2," which crossed the $400 million level on its 43rd day of release.

That put "The Dark Knight" at No. 8 on the all-time box-office charts.

It was poised to move up to No. 7 on Tuesday, passing the $403.7 million haul of the original "Spider-Man" to become the top-grossing comic-book adaptation ever.

Warner expects the film to pass the original "Star Wars" ($461 million) in about two weeks, making it No. 2 on the all-time domestic list behind "Titanic" ($600.8 million).

Even as "The Dark Knight" heads toward the $500 million mark, it will lag behind "Titanic" and "Star Wars" in terms of the number of tickets sold because admission prices are higher now.

In today's dollars, the Batman film would have to take in about $900 million to match the number of tickets that "Titanic" sold.

"The Dark Knight" has earned wild acclaim from critics and fans, particularly for Heath Ledger's maniacal delivery as Batman enemy the Joker.

Buzz for his role and the film reached a fever in the months after Ledger's death in January from an accidental prescription drug overdose.

The movie had a record opening weekend of $158.4 million.

"There's no question Heath Ledger's performance has made cinematic history.

It's one of the most important or memorable villains ever," Goldstein said.

"That added to it, but I think you have to look at a film in its entirety.

It's the marvelous job the filmmakers and the actors did."

Scarlett Johansson "Embarrassed" About Obama Emails, Talks Lesbian Kiss

Scarlett Johansson, a cast member in "Vicky Cristina Barcelona," looks down the red carpet at the premiere of the film in Los Angeles, Monday, Aug. 4, 2008.

(AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)


NEW YORK —

Scarlett Johansson can laugh about it now, but the actress says she was embarrassed by the media coverage of her so-called "e-mail relationship" with Barack Obama.

"It seemed to me to be like a product of extreme sexism, and I kept thinking to myself, 'God, if this was just, like, Kal Penn or George Clooney or any of the other (Obama) surrogates or supporters ... there wouldn't be (any) question about it.

Nobody would even talk about it," she said.

Johansson, a vocal supporter of Obama, told the Web site Politico.com in June that she and the Democratic presidential hopeful had been trading e-mails.

Obama later told reporters that Johansson doesn't have his personal e-mail address, and that his assistant forwarded one message from Johansson to which he replied.

"I was merely trying to express my delight at Obama's commitment to his campaign in every aspect and his interest and his support (in) his surrogates and his staff and his fellows, and how wonderful and refreshing that is.

And it was manipulated into such an unfortunate media frenzy of kind of a nonstory," the 23-year-old actress said Tuesday in an interview from Los Angeles, where she was promoting her new Woody Allen film "Vicky Cristina Barcelona."

The romantic comedy set against the bohemian backdrop of Barcelona, Spain, has its share of buzz over Johansson's much-hyped kiss with Penelope Cruz.

"It's just silly because ... the way people are talking about it you'd think it was ... a Bertolucci movie or something," Johansson said, laughing.

"People are saying, `It's Woody Allen's steamiest movie.'

I'm thinking, 'Woody Allen's steamiest WHAT?'"

It was the actress' third time working with Allen, who directed her in "Match Point" and "Scoop."

She and actor-beau Ryan Reynolds had been snapped by paparazzi on the set of the movie last summer; she confirmed the couple's engagement in early May.

Have they set a date?

"We're just enjoying our time," she said.

"We're just recently _ very recently _ engaged.

So, you know, we're just taking it easy.

And no big plan yet.

But it's a good time and we're just ... enjoying our time to be young and engaged.

"I mean, I'm 23.

There's no reason to rush into it.

Everything feels very natural and relaxed."
Bertelsmann Exits Sony BMG August 05, 2008 -

By Andre Paine, LondonSony Corporation has reached an agreement to acquire Bertelsmann AG's 50% stake in Sony BMG, four years after the joint venture was created.
The demerged music company is to be called Sony Music Entertainment Inc and it will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Sony Corporation of America.
The deal has been anticipated since last month (see Billboard.biz, July 26).
Sony Corporation will pay the German media company $1.2 billion, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today.
Bertelsmann will receive approximately $900 million for its 50% stake plus $300m of its share of cash on Sony BMG's balance sheet.
"This acquisition will allow us to achieve a deeper and more robust integration between the wide-ranging global assets of the music company and Sony's products, operating companies and affiliates," says Sony Corporation chairman and CEO Sir Howard Stringer.
"Over the past four years, Sony BMG has undertaken a very successful restructuring, streamlined operations and developed innovative digital partnerships that ensure it will continue to be a leader in the creation and distribution of music worldwide.
"The joint venture was due to expire in August 2009.
In a statement, Bertelsmann AG chairman and CEO Hartmut Ostrowski says, "The move is consistent with our new growth strategy and will enable us to focus on our defined growth areas.
Sony has been an excellent partner, and they are the right company to take this business to the next step and ensure that it realizes its full value and potential.
"The buy-out remains subject to regulatory approval in certain jurisdictions.
U.S. and European regulators could raise concerns about vertical integration at Sony, as the company's hardware business includes a joint venture with handset giant Ericsson for Walkman music-enabled mobile devices.
European independent music companies trade group Impala has already said it will continue to oppose the concentration of the market which it says resulted from the original Sony BMG arrangement.
Once the deal is completed, Sony Music Entertainment Inc will be home to labels such as Arista Records, Columbia Records, Epic Records, J Records Jive Records, RCA and Zomba with a roster of artists including Celine Dion, Alicia Keys, Bruce Springsteen, Usher and Justin Timberlake.
The two companies have agreed to continue to share the new company's manufacturing and distribution requirements between Sony's manufacturing subsidiary Sony DADC and Bertelsmann's services company,
Arvato Digital Services GmbH, extending agreements with Arvato for additional terms of up to six years.
Key `Idol' Producer Moving On August 05, 2008 -

By Associated Press
A key "American Idol" producer who's guided the top-rated TV show since its debut is leaving the job as the Fox juggernaut faces the challenge of staying on top in its eighth season.
Nigel Lythgoe is negotiating a joint-venture deal with "American Idol" creator Simon Fuller and 19 Entertainment, the company announced Monday.
The smiling, blond-haired Englishman, who could often be spotted on-camera sitting behind the "American Idol" judges' row, is familiar to viewers on "So You Think You Can Dance?", which he produces and helps judge.
"I will step back from my day-to-day producing work on 'American Idol' and will be devoting my time" to the new enterprise, Lythgoe said in a statement.
The change comes as "American Idol" jockeys to keep its hold on the No. 1 ratings spot, a rare feat for an aging show, and after last season's small ratings downturn and an unsettling audience shift.
The series averaged 28.4 million weekly viewers last season compared to the 30.8 million who watched during its highest-rated year, 2005-06.
Viewership for the May finale with winner David Cook and runner-up David Archuleta was the second-highest for the show in five years, but dropped slightly from last year among 18-to-49-year-old viewers - an indication that the "American Idol" audience is aging.
Fox congratulated Lythgoe on his new venture but acknowledged it was "disappointed" that he would not be continuing as executive producer.
"He is an extraordinarily talented producer whose creative contributions to the No. 1 show on television have been immeasurable," the network said in a statement.
It was unclear whether Lythgoe will continue to have a hand in "American Idol."
His fellow executive producer, Ken Warwick, also has worked on the show from the beginning.
Asked what roles Lythgoe and Warwick might have with the show when it returns next January, 19 Entertainment spokesman Eric Green said the producers for next season have yet to be decided.
National auditions for the singing contest's new season are under way.
In a statement, Fuller called Lythgoe "the best producer I have ever worked with" and noted they have collaborated for more than 10 years.
Fuller heads 19 Entertainment, which produces "American Idol" with FremantleMedia North America.
TV, film and stage projects all will be on the table for Fuller and Lythgoe's new enterprise, Green said.
The two created the "So You Think You Can Dance?" contest series, which airs on Fox.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Tuesday, 5th August 2008




This is style.....


















HOLLYWOOD, CA (Hollywood Today)

8/2/09 —

Once upon a time there was a Sex Goddess named Hedy Lamarr.


She was the first original naked beauty of the silver screen with her controversial full nude appearance in her film “Ecstasy” which back in 1932 had never been done before causing headlines and pandemonium around the globe and now is the subject of a wild book by Devra Z. Hill.

Hedy’s story is dynamic and inspiring whether you are aware of Hedy Lamarr or not and if you’re not- then you should be.

A highly sexual female as detailed in the hot steamy sex scenes brought to you by author Devra Hill, which allow us to eavesdrop in on intimate moments between Hedy and another woman;

Hedy and her lover, etc., translated at a time when women were still very sexually repressed.


Born Jewish and from Vienna, a more controversial dichotomy is Hedy’s sexual liaison with hated dictator Adolf Hitler as revealed for the first time in “What Almost Happened to Hedy Lamarr” on Corona Books.

Even glamorous movie stars can look for love in all the wrong places as Hedy did with her attraction to mean and abusive men.

The author uses her poetic license to dramatize what might have happened had Hedy continued on this path.


As power is the greatest aphrodisiac perhaps her real life sexual liaison with Hitler was a way to stay alive during a time in history when Hitler was killing all the Jews in Europe for surely had this incredible scandal ever gotten out during those years there would have been no movie star career for Hedy Lamarr.

We forget about this horrific part of our history and what it might have meant to those who had the unfortunate fate of being swept up during this traumatizing time.

Although as the author explains “Initially, Hedy was forced by her abusive first husband to have sex to pacify his kinky sexual needs as part of an unusual sexual scenario” which includes Hitler’s physical abnormalities as documented in this book.

Perhaps staying on Hitler’s good side was a means of survival back then.

Her abusive first husband was busy making weapons for Hitler’s upcoming war which explains the connection.


The author was privy to many private conversations with the Sex Goddess which were revealed to me like the time Hedy showed off one of the priceless gifts bestowed upon her from Adolf Hitler;


“Hedy showed me the gift herself” she said.

“Really? What was it? What did it look like? I asked.


“It was a shiny solid gold cigarette case with a diamond swastika on it.

She handed it to me herself so I could hold it in my hand.”


Hedy Lamarr led a truly fascinating life as one of the most glamorous movie stars

of the now obsolete big studio publicity machine in the days when there were major film studios that actually groomed their applicants for movie stardom with an endless supply of make up, wardrobe, managers, publicity, and acting lessons, at their disposal.


Hedy was one of a kind and somewhat of a paradox with unusual qualities;

in business she was a woman with her own mind who did not let others dictate to her but rather, she told them what she wanted and got it.

A true pioneer in the day when women did not even have the right to vote Hedy was already a ‘mover and shaker.’

Yet in her private life it seemed that she always acquiesced submitting to the sexual demands of others who wished to dominate her as exemplified in many of the hot steamy sex scenes the author writes about in this book.


Another fascinating twist into the mind of this legendary movie icon was her Kleptomania when caught in a department store for stealing resulted in an endless array of tabloid and newspaper stories.

The author shares another never before documented moment when she explains to me what happened when she was actually with Hedy shopping and witnessed her penchant for theft.

She noticed out of the corner of her eye that Hedy had stolen an object from the store they were in!


“Hedy- you can’t do that” she pointed out.


“Yes I can; they owe me”


“Who owes you? Owes you for what?”


“For stealing my patent” Hedy replied.


Indeed Hedy Lamarr harbored a deep resentment which included a sense of entitlement as she felt that the government owed her a living since she had been the first to actually develop the early cell phone technology.

However, because they did not use her invention until after her seventeen year patent had expired, this left Hedy with not a cent for her brilliant invention.

She lost the opportunity to make millions of dollars and always remained angry about that.

Perhaps this was the beginning of the slippery slope that led to her Kleptomania.


The author’s account possesses the key elements of sex, power, and scandal, a sure fire hit for success.

Unusual insight into the mind of Hedy Lamarr and what made her tick at a time when women were seen and not heard, along with all the twists and turns of her fascinating movie star life and steamy sexual scenarios make it clear that Hedy Lamarr was ahead of her time and make this
book a truly fascinating read.


All Corona Books available on amazon.com and all online facilities.


Jody Babydol Gibson is a high profile personality dubbed the “Queen of Scandal” who has appeared nationally on television with her previously authored best seller “Secrets of a Hollywood Super Madam”,

a sexually explicit account which names A-List clients detailing her thirteen years servicing the rich and famous as a former Hollywood Madam, along with her riveting experiences surviving three years in a maximum security state penitentiary for her alleged “crime.”


Today she is an author who resides as Publisher of Corona Books.


“What Almost Happened to Hedy Lamarr” by Devra Hill


(Contributions by Jody Babydol Gibson )


Corona Books

www.CoronaBooksandMusic.com. 6 x 9 soft cover $19.95


avail August 2008

The Jacksons

To Reign As BMI's 2008 Icons

Michael Jackson in the Jackson 5 era


August 04, 2008 , 6:15 PM ET


Gail Mitchell, L.A.


Pioneering R&B/pop group The Jacksons will be honored as this year's BMI Icons.

The brothers will be feted during the organization's eighth annual Urban Awards on Sept. 4.


Taking place at the Wilshire Theatre in Beverly Hills, Calif., the ceremony will also honor the songwriters, producers and publishers of the most-performed R&B/hip-hop songs of the past year in the BMI repertoire.

Starting out as The Jackson 5 in their hometown of Gary, Ind., siblings Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon and Michael first recorded for the Steeltown label in 1968.

After signing with Motown, the group launched a string of R&B and pop crossover hits beginning with 1969's "I Want You Back."Later smashes included "Enjoy Yourself,"

"Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)" and "State of Shock" with Mick Jagger, released in 1984 at the height of Michael Jackson's worldwide superstardom.

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, The Jacksons join such previous BMI Icons as James Brown, Isaac Hayes and Carlos Santana.