Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Rock It, Leighton!
Simply the Shiz
James Franco is simply the coolest. He is famous and going back to school in New York, and he's starring in Gus Van Sant's latest film Milk which looks really good (and he is in Nights in Rodanthe-tee hee). He hosted SNL two weeks ago and was somewhat funny. No matter, he seems like a really nice, interesting person. Here he is on the cover of the current issue of Out magazine.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Tidbits
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Fashion
Tidbits
-Sidenote: Betty's new love interest and neighbor is a wonderful addition to the cast. His name is Val Emmich (above right), and in real life, he is a musician. Now he is playing a musician on the show (what a stretch). He guest starred on 30 Rock last season as Liz's cub when she ventured into cougardom for an episode. He also guest starred on ABC's short-lived Cashmere Mafia. I, now, adore him.
-Britney's new single, Womanizer, was released to radio yesterday. I heard it, and I am slightly disappointed. It sounds like Rihanna's SOS, and it's somewhat repetitive. Maybe it's a grower. I love me some Britney, not the person exactly, but the songs. I really like the verses and their flow, but the chorus is repetitive. Oh well, I'll dance to this anyway, and the chorus will grow on me. Check it out below.
The Definition of Fierce
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Tidbits
New Lady GaGa!
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Tidbits
-The new Kings of Leon album, Only By the Night, was released today and it is currently #1 on the iTunes album chart. This is really good news! Also, Sex on Fire has moved up to #58 in the iTunes Top 100.
-Disney darling, Demi Lovato's debut, is number 2 on the iTunes album chart beating out the new Pussycat Dolls album, for today, at least. Lovato's album has some decent pop-rock ditties on it.
-TV on the Radio's new album currently stands at #5 and Cold War Kids' new one is at #9. Lots of good new albums out today!
-Britney Spears new single Womanizer won't be released to radio until next Monday, the 29th. Oh well.
Monday, September 22, 2008
Dayum!
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Tidbits
-Jennifer Hudson was #15 on the UK charts with her debut single Spotlight. That is much higher than the song has gotten here.
Modern Women
What the women of 'Mad Men' can teach us about Sarah Palin
By Joanna Weiss, Globe Staff September 21, 2008
If you really care about Sarah Palin - care in the sense that, like most women I know, you've been spending a good chunk of your waking life thinking about her and all that she represents - you might also care about Joan Holloway.
And if you know, offhand, who Joan Holloway is, you're probably part of the cultural elite that Palin's most devoted fans abhor. She's a supporting character in "Mad Men," the AMC series about 1960s-era advertising executives - a rarefied TV taste and an unquestioned media darling. The show draws between one and two million viewers every Sunday, decent but not grand for cable TV. But it's been featured on the cover of the New York Times Magazine.
That "Mad Men" lacks mass appeal is, on some level, not surprising. It's beautifully crafted and emotionally intense, but its characters are selfish, remote, and self-absorbed. Episodes unfold with maddening sloth, the TV equivalent of watching lava flow in slow motion. And it's packaged in such a perfect period box that it can feel like a sterile cultural artifact: a look at the way things used to be, viewed safely and smugly from our own enlightened age.
But perhaps, given the joy and consternation about Palin, "Mad Men" would gain more viewers if it weren't mis-titled and mis-billed. This is really a show about women. And work. And the choices they make. And the opportunities they have. And the jealousies they hold. And the judgments they unleash on one another, none of which are so unfamiliar today.
Up to now, the buxom Joan has occupied a sort of middle ground between the show's main female characters, who represent opposing paths for women of their day. Betty Draper, the wife of an ad-agency creative director, gave up a modeling career for the suburban housewife's life. She's a textbook case for Betty Friedan, emotionally estranged from her cheating husband, so bored and miserable that she becomes a terrible mother to boot. (She has also turned into an archetype; last week, the women-centric website Jezebel.com referred to Cindy McCain as "a nouveau Betty Draper.")
Peggy Olson, meanwhile, is a young, talented copywriter who first joins Betty's husband's firm as part of the secretarial pool. In a world where men routinely call women "girls," and sometimes literally chase them though the office, she's not classically-attractive enough to fare well. When she tries to play the game, and sleeps with a married colleague, she gets pregnant. But she hides her belly shockingly well, apparently gives the baby away, and resumes work as if none of it had happened. Now, downplaying her sexuality in girlish dresses with Peter Pan collars, she wins appreciation for her talent and her brain.
Joan, the office manager, has amassed a certain power within the dictates of '60s gender relations. She rules over the secretarial pool with a well-manicured iron fist, and cows the men with her tight skirt and tighter sweater. But Joan is also aging - she's passed the dreaded 30-year-mark, unmarried - and she realizes her options for the future are limited. Her place as office beauty queen is about to be usurped. Her fiance thinks she ought to live the Betty Draper life.
So last week, when Joan got the chance to fill in for a man, vetting TV scripts to plan for placement of commercials, she saw a potential way to redefine herself. She enjoyed the work and did it well, but her male colleague didn't seem to notice: too conditioned to seeing Joan as nothing but a sexpot, he offered the permanent job to another man. And Joan, who had squeezed herself so successfully into the box she had created, lacked the will to fight for a different reputation.
The fascinating thing about Joan's foray into "men's work" is the way she managed to still be a woman: part Betty Draper, part Peggy Olson, and a good bit of Marilyn Monroe. She succeeded not just because she was competent - though she was - but because she was womanly, too, and knew how male clients would respond. In the world of advertising, she had the perfect sales pitch. In political circles, they might have called her a natural.
Admired and resented
That talent defines Sarah Palin, too, in this era of fewer obstacles. The vice presidential nominee's fast rise and vast popularity in Alaska owe to her raw charisma, her ability to navigate the system on her own terms, and her way of being many sorts of women at once. She's the devoted mother on a pedestal, who showers her disabled son with the message that he's perfect. She's the beauty pageant veteran who understands how lipstick modulates a tough interior. She's the ambitious careerist who won't let enemies block her path to power. The sort of woman that some other women admire, and some resent.
And, like Joan, she's quite different - and more intriguing, and more relevant - than the current, common model of successful women on TV.
Network and cable lineups are filled with series about high-powered working women: tough cops and lawyers, skilled doctors, media moguls. The shows aimed most at female viewers - such as NBC's "Lipstick Jungle," which launches its second season on Wednesday, and ABC's "Private Practice," which premieres new episodes Oct. 1 - are almost-absurdly perfunctory about their characters' rise to power. They've already scored the jobs, the fancy apartments, the wardrobe trappings, and the collegial respect; for them, drama still lies in the old soap-opera quest for love. These shows peddle the myth that intra-female battles are in the past. For the most part, fellow women exist, not as skeptical competition, but as a sturdy, estrogenic cheering squad.
If there is intra-gender conflict it stems from the good old generational divide. In this week's "Lipstick Jungle," Brooke Shields's character, a movie studio president named Wendy, discovers that her teenage daughter is sneaking into clubs, and starts leaving the office early to have dinner with her kids. For this, she's excoriated by her mother, a former high-powered business executive, who warns Wendy that in a cutthroat workplace, she stands to lose her job.
That the mother is played by Mary Tyler Moore - who has played every step of the housewife-to-mogul continuum in the course of her own TV career - is presented here with unspoken irony. It's unclear how we're supposed to view her warning: as a useful reminder of a still-cruel working world, or the rantings of somebody steeped in the past. The show seems to lean toward the latter, since Wendy doesn't seem to face much backlash (by the next episode, she's back to high-powered dealing) and tells her mother that she has the right to make different choices.
But Moore's character at least gives voice to the still-burning question of whether women can have it all at once. Her answer, unlike Sarah Palin's, is "no." And in modern political terms, she's much closer to the Hillary Clinton model of female advancement, an older, battle-hardened version of "Mad Men's" Peggy.
Yes, Clinton is a mother, and by all accounts a good one, but maternity isn't a part of her public image. Her 1990s experiments with girlish headbands and chocolate chip cookies felt as artificial as they were. This was a woman who clearly wanted to be in the boardroom or the West Wing, a woman whose ambition was too strong to be derailed by a husband's public philandering.
And her success in the political arena had next-to-nothing to do with femininity. It came to be after her child was grown, once she had stepped out from the role of wife, printed campaign signs with her first name alone, and taken on the androgynous uniform of short haircut and pantsuit. This primary season, her barely-glimpsed cleavage and barely-existent tears made headlines because they diverged from the image she had so successfully crafted.
Being the boss
Her type - female, accomplished, and unfeminine - hasn't always been treated well on TV. (Think of Rosalind Shays, the high-powered and viperous lawyer from "L.A. Law," who met her demise by stepping into an elevator shaft.) Today, a more aggressive sort of femininity is held up as a working women's model. Sarah Palin, with her long hair and her Naughty Monkey peek-toe pumps, looks a lot like the younger stars of "Lipstick Jungle," a show that opens with images of women's feet in high-heeled shoes.
Except that Palin is the loving mommy, too, while for most of these TV characters, motherhood is an afterthought - either abandoned entirely or used as a minor and fleeting plot point. If these women do have children, then by virtue of their wealth, they don't seem to worry about the logistics and cost of child care, the emotional pull of home life, the mental draw of work. Years ago, I interviewed Candace Bushnell, the novelist and "Lipstick Jungle" executive producer, who told me that the antidote to work-life balance issues is to simply be the boss.
It's also the easy way out, a way for network characters to stay likable and safe. For viewers, the question of whether these women are going to get the guy - or which guy is best to get - provides a not-too-taxing form of escape. "Private Practice" is especially sneaky this way, since a good portion of its weekly medical subplots involve sick babies and sick kids. Mommy-viewers still have ample chances to get in a good cry, while the main female characters aren't culpable for any tough work-life decisions.
Throw real-life parenting choices into the drama, after all, and you're suddenly on quicksand. Here is where women start to judge each other, whether they mean to or not. (As any working mother knows, the seemingly-innocent playground question "Does he go to preschool?" is loaded with a thousand tiny judgments, the answer packed with defenses.) It's still hard for women to think of Sarah Palin's life without judging her against other mothers of her generation, to think unpleasant thoughts about choices, priorities, and economic luck.
In Alaska, Palin has turned her office into a de facto day care center and nursed her tiny baby during conference calls. Among conservatives, this wins her a sort of Betty Draper credibility: She walks the walk of family devotion. Liberals raise the question, loaded with doubt, of whether Palin would work to make things so flexible for the rest of us. To them, her motherhood comes across as mocking, a veneer of perfection that covers the struggles most working women face.
In these days of blogs, flame-throwing politics, and dug-in ideological differences, it's hard to find online or talk-show testimony that doesn't view Palin through one of these divides: She's either an aspiration or an insult. But for women watching the race from the sidelines, like so many TV viewers, Palin tugs at strings that transcend party lines. It's not so easy to separate the personal from the political - just as it isn't easy for Joan Holloway to navigate the changing lines between femininity and success .
For women, especially, advancement in the workplace - whether in a cloistered ad agency or in the arena of national politics - is hardly a matter of merit alone. It's telling that the one television show that addresses the subject head-on is set so far in the past.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Trailer Time
-Synecdoche, New York: Philip Seymour Hoffman's new movie which was written and directed by Charlie Kaufman, who wrote Eternal Sunshine for the Spotless Mind, looks really, really good. I love Hoffman and will watch him in anything. This movie is about a theater director who wants to do a play about New York City life, and build a replica of the city, and set the play in the replica. He needs loads of extras, his wife has just left him, and he has a medical condition. The movie is also about the women in his life. Sounds mind-boggling. It is, in a wonderful, dreamy way. The cast is out of this world: Catherine Keener (who played Harper Lee alongside Hoffman in Capote), Michelle Williams (genius actress who starred in Brokeback Mountain), Samantha Morton (who has been in tons of things-Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown, Minority Report-bottom line: she is wonderful), Dianne Weist (I love her. She is amazing.), Hope Davis (another love of mine. She is good in anything.), and Jennifer Jason Leigh (who was really good in last year's Margot at the Wedding). Well enough chatter. Here's the trailer:
-Doubt: The trailer for John Patrich Shanley's Pulitzer Prize-winning play turned film, Doubt, has arrived. It looks so friggin' good. Meryl is a good choice for the lead role, and she rocks that bonnet like it's no one's business. Amy Adams is also in it along with Mr. Hoffman (again). What a cast! This looks intense, and the music is very effective. Meryl will mess you up if you cross her (in this trailer at least). Ahh so good.
-Milk: Director Gus Van Sant gives us Milk, about the first gay man to be elected to a public office in America (San Francisco's Board of Supervisors in 1977), Harvey Milk, played by Sean Penn. This movie looks very interesting, and is a very different role for Sean Penn. James Franco (fox alert), Emile Hirsch (more of a subtle fox), Diego Luna (haha love him), and that kid from High School Musical who played Sharpay's brother (I'm sure Disney is loving that he is in this movie) also star. It looks so good, and I love the music in the trailer.
-Changeling: Clint Eastwood's latest film stars the luscious-lipped Angelina Jolie as a California mom in late 20's LA whose son goes missing, and then is returned to him. The thing is: the kid's not her son. This looks intense and possibly disturbing. Angelina Jolie changes her voice a little in the first scene of the trailer which is beautiful with the black umbrellas and rain, and she doesn't sound like Angelina Jolie at all, much more timid. She looks like she will be superb in this movie. John Malkovich, who just came off a hilarious turn in Burn After Reading, also stars along with The Office employee and Oscar nominee, Amy Ryan, and uber fox, Jeffrey Donovan, who stars on USA's sunny spy series, Burn Notice. I'm looking forward to this one.
Tidbits
-Kings of Leon are Number 1 in the UK (on the charts and on itunes) with their song Sex on Fire from their new album which comes out next week. The ironic thing is that Sex on Fire or any other Kings of Leon song aren't even in the US iTunes Top 100.
-Lady GaGa's video for her second single Beautiful, Dirty, Rich is out. It includes clips from ABC's soapy, delicious Dirty Sexy Money which stars the wonderful Peter Krause. There is more Sexy Money than GaGa, but she still leaves a mark with her outrageous outfits. It's basically a promo for the show. Well, the new season looks like it will be super juicy and expectedly over the top. Perfect song for this show. Well done, GaGa.
Fashion
The Teen Vogue Young Hollywood Party was in L.A. last night, and there were some notable appearances. Ok, basically, piece of meat supreme Zac Efron and that's it.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Amy Poehler
P.S. She and her husband, funnyman Will Arnett, are such an awesome couple. I love him. She is so lucky. Grrr.
Just Because
Music Update!!!
-Here is the cover for the new Girls Aloud single, The Promise that I raved about earlier this week. It just gets better and better each time I listen to it. They all look super vampy and loverly in this photo.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Cool Remix
Girls Aloud Return
The lovely British lasses of Girls Aloud premiered their new single, The Promise, on a British radio station Sunday night. At first when I heard the song, I was a little underwhelmed, but then, I listened to it again and realized how catchy and clever it was. It's has a 60's undertone. It's the gals own spin on the 60's soul sound resurgence that has taken place in England in '07 and '08. Sugababes did this with their newest single to, but I like the Girls Aloud song better. The chorus is super catchy and the song really gets going with the second verse. The horns create a great (ba bada bada) groove throughout. The girls voices are in top form. The "you're gonna make me, make me, love you" part winds and spins and leads to "the promise I made, promise I made" part. Very different song for them, and they pull it off. Well done, gals. I can't wait for the new album.
Music Update!!!
Sunday, September 14, 2008
New Videos!
Emerging UK popstar, Luigi Masi, has released the video for his debut single Strobelight. This is a seductive and bumping pop song. It's not super fast and upbeat, but it's really effective and kind of glides and slithers along. It will be released October 20 in the UK with the album to follow in early '09. Check it out!
UK sister duo, Electrovamp, who I wrote about a couple weeks ago, have released the video for their new single, Drinks Taste Better When They're Free. I love these gals. They're sassy and fun. Their songs are super catchy, loud, and flirty. This song is loads of fun and the guitar shreds deliciously through it. I also love the 'wooo ooo" sound in the background.
Britain's own Estelle, singer of the genius and funky American Boy, has a new single. It is called Pretty Please (Love Me), and it features Cee-Lo of Gnarls Barkley. This song is unbashased old school joy. It's upbeat, and the vocals are perfect and soaring. It's a big band '60's-Motown sounding song. The video is amusing too. For some reason, Aubrey O' Day from Danity Kane is in the beginning, playing with her little dog, in the recording studio where the first part of the video is set. I don't really understand her presence. Actress Taraji Henson also stars in the video as Estelle's friend/rival who flirts with Estelle's boyfriend. Great song. Enjoy!
Saturday, September 13, 2008
New Black Kids
Fashion
Here are two of the outfits I liked on Project Runway this past week. The challenge was to make an avant garde design based on an astrological sign. The winner was Jerrell (left). This isn't the best picture of it, but it looked great on the runway. I love the details of the long, high-waisted skirt. The gold top goes well with it and the peacock shrug is a good pattern choice. Joe's dress is on the right. I like the ruffly, dramatic bottom part the most. Kenley is annoying me so much. Also, Blayne is gone. Tear. I loved how he said "I love your faces." when he said goodbye to everyone, and how he was partnered with Stella. I love their relationship.
Friday, September 12, 2008
New Ne-Yo
Thursday, September 11, 2008
New Weave
Beautiful
Strike the Pose
News Galore!
-Sugababes new album will be titled Catfights & Spotlights. I love it. Super fierce album title.
-Girls Aloud new single, The Promise, will be played for the first time Sunday night on British radio. This is their first single from their fifth album coming later this fall. I think they could have released plenty more singles from their last album, 2007's genius Tangled Up, but oh well. New Girls Aloud music is super exciting too.
-Super cool Canadian, London-based band, Dragonette, who I posted about a couple weeks ago, are finally releasing their debut album, Galore, in the US on October 28. I'm so excited. The album features such divine songs as Competition, Take It Like A Man, and I Get Around. Their lead singer is the definition of fierce.
-Deeve extraordinaire, Beyonce, will be releasing her third solo album on November 18. The first single, If I Were a Boy, will be released on Oct. 7
-Apparently, Britney Spears new album will be out by the end of the year as opposed to early next year as was expected. The single should be out at the end of November, and the album should be released in December. Super exciting!
-The Saturdays new album will not be called Taking Back Sunday. Darn. It was such a clever title. Now the title is rather lame: Chasing Lights. Oh well.