Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Forest Whitaker - King of the Oscars?

'Dreamgirls' picks up eight Oscar nods, but not for best picture

'Dreamgirls' has earned eight Academy Award nominations. However, to the surprise of many, the film is not in the running for best picture or best director. "Babel" received seven nominations, followed by Spanish-language adult fairy tale "Pan's Labyrinth" and royals drama "The Queen" with six each.

Forest Whitaker, who captured a Golden Globe for his portrayal of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin in "The Last King of Scotland," is up for an Oscar for best actor. Other Golden Globe winners with Academy Award nominations: Helen Mirren for best actress as British monarch Elizabeth II in "The Queen," as well as Eddie Murphy and Jennifer Hudson for their supporting roles in "Dreamgirls." Meryl Streep, up for best actress ("The Devil Wears Prada"), has become the most nominated actor in history with 14 nods.

Visit Oscars.org for a detailed list of nominations. The winners will be announced February 25 in Los Angeles.

For those of you who are Jennifer Hudson fans, she learned of her nomination while in London, where 'Dreamgirls' is opening in the UK. NBC Today Show's Al Roker interviewed Hudson live. She seemed genuinely stunned and speechless. She said she was simply "living in the moment."


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Sunday, January 21, 2007

Clinton launches bid for president

Clinton emails intentions to supporters

All eyes are on the Democratic political scene, now that New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton officially has taken the first step for the presidential run in 2008. A few days ago, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama announced that he was forming a presidential exploratory committee. To date, there are five Democratic presidential hopefuls.

When it comes to demographics, Obama and Clinton are hoping to win solid support from women and people of color. Both senators are also seeking financial backing from many of the same funding sources, as the New York Times reports.


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Thursday, January 18, 2007

Obama follow-up

Having it both ways?

Obama's Toughest Sell for White House Bid May Be to Other Blacks (Agence France-Presse)

Obama Thrills Blacks Who See Shot at History (USA Today)



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Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Art Buchwald dies

Beloved journalist never lost his sense of humor

Art Buchwald, 81, the newspaper humor columnist for more than a half-century who found new comic material in the issues that come up at the end of life, died of kidney failure last night at his son's home in Washington, his family announced today. Details from the Washington Post.

Related: A Visit With Art Buchwald: 'Tell Them to Just Keep Writing' (Editor & Publisher)


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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Obama launches presidential bid

Illinois senator targets voters seeking change

Sen. Barack Obama has filed paperwork forming a presidential exploratory committee. The committee allows him to raise money and put together a campaign structure. He is expected to announce a full-fledged candidacy on Feb. 10 in Springfield, Ill., where he can tap into the legacy of hometown hero Abraham Lincoln.

The freshman Illinois senator - and top contender for the Democratic nomination - said the past six years have left the country in a precarious place and he promoted himself as the standard-bearer for a new kind of politics.

"Our leaders in Washington seem incapable of working together in a practical, commonsense way," Obama said in a video posted on his Web site. "Politics has become so bitter and partisan, so gummed up by money and influence, that we can't tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that's what we have to change first."

The 45-year-old has few accomplishments in national politics after serving little more than two years in the Senate. However, at a time when many voters say they are unhappy with the direction of the country, a lack of experience in the nation's capital may not be a liability.

Obama's appeal lies with his soft-spoken demeanor as he connects with crowds across the country. Others seem intrigued by his ethnic background, his opposition to the Iraq war and his fresh face. Obama has entered a competitive race that also is expected to include front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York.

Meanwhile, London's Sunday Times reports that there is a distinct lack of enthusiasm among American black political activists. Clearly, Obama is a media darling. Photographers seem to follow him everywhere. Could the cool reception among many old-guard civil rights activists be a simple case of political envy? The Sunday Times writes, in part:
At a meeting of activists in New York last week, the Rev Jesse Jackson, the first black candidate to run for president, declined to endorse Obama. "Our focus right now is not on who's running, because there are a number of allies running," Jackson said.

The Rev Al Sharpton, the fiery New York preacher who joined the Democratic primary race in 2004, said he was considering another presidential run of his own. And Harry Belafonte, the calypso singer who became an influential civil rights activist, said America needed to be "careful" about Obama: "We don't know what he's truly about." . . .

When asked about Obama's likely candidacy, [Sharpton] shrugged: "Right now we're hearing a lot of media razzle-dazzle. I'm not hearing a lot of meat, or a lot of content. I think when the meat hits the fire, we'll find out if it's just fat, or if there's some real meat there." . . .

"He's a young man in many ways to be admired," Belafonte said. "Obviously very bright, speaks very well, cuts a handsome figure. But all of that is just the king's clothes. Who's the king?"

Some believe that Obama threatens Jackson, Sharpton and Belafonte because he has an appeal that transcends race. The Wall Street Journal addresses the issue in an op-ed piece:

Men like Jackson, Sharpton and Belafonte have made their careers on the exploitation of white guilt. Obama is a threat to their power and livelihood.

Many Americans who are attracted by the Illinois senator's charm are also intrigued by his background. Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, where his parents met while studying at the University of Hawaii. His father was black and from Kenya; his mother, white and from Wichita, Kan.

Obama's parents divorced when he was two and his father returned to Kenya. His mother later married an Indonesian student and the family moved to Jakarta. Obama returned to Hawaii when he was 10 to live with his maternal grandparents.

He graduated from Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where he was the first African-American elected editor of the Harvard Law Review. Obama settled in Chicago, where he joined a law firm, helped local churches establish job training programs and met his future wife, Michelle Robinson. They have two daughters, Malia and Sasha.

In 1996, he was elected to the Illinois state Senate, where he earned a reputation as a consensus-building Democrat who was strongly liberal on social and economic issues, backing gay rights, abortion rights, gun control, universal health care and tax breaks for the poor.

Obama's two best-selling autobiographies, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream and Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance, showcase the senator's writing skills. Obama's quick rise to national prominence began with his keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention.

For Sharpton to use words like "media razzle-dazzle" to describe Obama is interesting - in light of the fact that Sharpton himself is the king of "media razzle-dazzle," at least in this writer's eyes. As for Jackson, some of us have been waiting for years for Jesse to get a real job.

It's not uncommon for some highly visible black activists, so-called civil rights leaders, to be highly critical of black Republicans. Over the years, Sharpton made some cutting remarks about Colin Powell. Clarence Thomas has been taking hits by the African-American community for a long, long time. Many Americans, however, are surprised to see liberal-minded African-American activists on the fence about Obama, another liberal. But Democratic strategists are not surprised at all. Once again, this proves that African-Americans are not monolithic.

For another look at Obama, check out an editorial by Newsday's Les Payne, titled Osama's long road ahead.

Next up: Obama squares off with Sen. Clinton. Other Democrats who have announced a campaign or exploratory committee are 2004 vice presidential nominee John Edwards, former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack, Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich. Sens. John Kerry of Massachusetts and Joe Biden of Delaware and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson also are considering a run.



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Monday, January 15, 2007

'Dreamgirls,' 'Babel' win top Golden Globes

Jennifer Hudson named best supporting actress

The uplifting musical "Dreamgirls" and the cultural drama "Babel" won the top Golden Globe awards on Monday, making them instant front-runners in Hollywood's Oscar race.

"Dreamgirls," which follows the rise of three women singers and closely resembles the ascendancy of all-girl groups like The Supremes, won three awards. "Dreamgirls" nabbed more honors than any other film. It won trophies for best musical or comedy, as well as best supporting actor and actress for Eddie Murphy and Jennifer Hudson, respectively.

Hudson (pictured above in a scene from "Dreamgirls") plays powerhouse singer Effie White. The former "American Idol'' contestant said she based her role on Florence Ballard, the original lead singer for the Supremes, who was replaced by Diana Ross. In the film, Hudson's character, the overweight and volatile Effie, is forced aside after the group begins to get attention.

"Babel," a story of cultural differences and communication failures across borders, earned only one award but it was a big one - best film drama. It entered the Golden Globes as the most nominated movie with seven.


Related: MTV Movie News, All Headline News

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A man without borders


Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.


This year marks the 21st anniversary of the federal Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, first observed on Jan. 20, 1986. Were he alive today (Janury 15), King would have celebrated his 78th birthday. Millions of Americans are remembering the civil rights leader and human rights advocate over this long holiday weekend.

King was a husband, a father, and a preacher. He was also the preeminent leader of a movement that continues to transform America and the world. One of the twentieth century's most influential men, he lived an extraordinary life.

To view a timeline of milestones in King's life, as well as a photo gallery, click here.

To truly understand King, this writer believes that one should read his writings. The King Estate has copyrighted his works. However, selected examples of his writings may be viewed online. Among them - the address King delivered in acceptance of the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. The King Papers Project is housed at Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute at Stanford University.

Journalists, historians, legislators and community leaders continue to examine whether King's appeal for peace with justice is as relevant today as it was when he was alive. Last year, an editorial in the Houston Chronicle attempted to place King's philosophy into present-day perspective in an editorial. Here is an excerpt from the piece:

Although he rose to national prominence fighting racial segregation in the South, many of the issues roiling the United States 38 years after his assassination would be very familiar to Martin Luther King Jr.

Before his death, the Baptist minister had denounced America's involvement in the Vietnam War, a daring stance that fueled the growing opposition to the carnage in Southeast Asia. He was bitterly criticized in the media and by government officials for venturing beyond the sphere of civil rights, as if that were the only area in which he was entitled to an opinion.

With the country now split by the bloody, open-ended struggle in Iraq and by the mistaken justification for going to war, it's not hard to predict where King would stand on the matter.

Americans debate the revelation that their government is conducting warrantless surveillance of Americans inside the United States. King had plenty of experience on that score. He was relentlessly wiretapped and trailed by the FBI. Then FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover was convinced that King was a communist sympathizer.

Just as he stood with refuse workers in Memphis in the last days before an assassin's bullet struck him down, King would championed the dispossessed evacuees of Hurricane Katrina, potent symbols of a race-based economic underclass that persists as a legacy of slavery and discrimination. The New Orleans nightmare that Katrina exposed indicates that the vision King enunciated in his "I Have a Dream" speech is not yet realized.

Like his role model for nonviolent protest, Mohandas K. Gandhi, King grew to be a world figure by embracing universal humanitarian concerns that surmounted ethnicity and religion. As he once said, "Evil is not driven out, but crowded out ... through the expulsive power of something good."

That's why the celebration of his life today cannot be limited to a single community or issue. African-Americans are justly proud that he rose from their ranks, but his life is significant to all Americans.



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Sunday, January 14, 2007

'Nobody wants to see your finger up your nose'

The great art of etiquette - for children


Babies are born rude. It is the duty of adults to transform them from loud house guests into charming people. At least that's the message we get in a new wave of books on etiquette. These books are all over the map, with some being better than others, as the New York Times reports.


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Thursday, January 04, 2007

Do we still need magazines?

Lidster on periodicals

I am a product of the golden age of magazines, and I rue what has become of a formerly noble adjunct to book reading. I scan the mag section at supermarkets and am not piqued by the offerings. My first wife used to justifiably chastise me for spending what seemed like the GDP of an emirate on my weekly and monthly intake of journals of all kinds. My current wife needs have no such fiscal fears. There is nothing to buy.

Journalist Ian Lidster, publisher of Or so I thought, has written an insightful post about periodicals and how they have changed. He sets the tone for his musings with the excerpt above. Click here to read the entire post. Peer at magazines though Ian's eyes.


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The great escape

Visiting with Maya Angelou in New York

Maya Angelou's second home is an urban getaway filled with art, sunlight and color. It's also a great illustration of transformation.

Angelou knows about transformation because she's lived it. She's led a remarkable life. It began with her poor childhood in Stamps, Ark., and St. Louis, MO. Today she enjoys literary prominence. It's a journey that took her to California, Egypt, Ghana and - finally - North Carolina.

The best-selling first volume of her autobiography - “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings -” is required reading for millions of American students. Her collection of poems, Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'Fore I Diiie,” was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.

Angelou has written, produced, directed and starred in productions for stage, film and television, and has long been a civil rights activist. Her calm and thoughtful demeanor has given birth to innovative art forms and permanently impacted our culture.

A reporter recently spent time with Angelou at her second home in New York. Every room reflects her unique flair for color and comfort. Click here to read the story.

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