Celebrity Updates

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Michael Shanks: Beyond the gate

Hear the entire interview here or on iTunes.

Michael Shanks is an actor, and while it’s easy to get lost in the character he has played on, off and on again for a dozen years, there’s a lot under the surface.

Born in Vancouver and raised in small town British Columbia, Shanks began his acting career playing Charlie Brown in the fourth grade play. He witnessed his first television production in college while taking a beach break from trying out for a play. Ironically, it was “MacGyver” that shanks saw being filmed, not knowing of course that he would one day star beside Richard Dean Anderson in “SG-1.”





He made his television debut in a 1993 episode of “The Commish,” a popular ABC crime drama. He landed a lot of minor roles before getting his big break on “Stargate SG-1″ in 1997, staring in 196 episodes in the series as an adventurous archeologist named Dr. Daniel Jackson. Since the end of “Stargate SG-1″ in 2007, Shanks, 38, has been trying to remake himself as an actor

“Well its a double-edged sword, I will say this,” Shanks said in his interview with Blast. “The things that come down the pipe, career-wise, that are offers to pay the bills are sort of sci-fi related projects.”

But, humbly, Shanks admits that all he can do is keep trying to land roles — hopefully roles that aren’t nerdy archeologists. “You just have to get back in a line as if you’re starting all over again,” he said.

We saw some of this. Shanks left “SG-1″ after season 5 and landed a few small roles, including two episodes of “Andromeda,” where he met his wife. It’s possible we may never have seen Daniel Jackson again if Shanks was offered another starring role (pure speculation). But Daniel’s was a popular role, and Shanks returned to “Stargate,” first as a guest, and then in his everyday role.

After “Stargate,” Shanks got to show some range by playing a pseudo-villian in the popular USA series “Burn Notice.” He played Victor, a rogue secret agent taking revenge on the shadowy intelligence agency that killed his family. He also recently landed a role that could bring him more into the mainstream by appearing in The CW’s “Smallville,” as comic book hero Hawkman. It’s still in the realm of sci-fi/fantasy, but the show has a wider following.

Still though, we can’t forget what Shanks and the “SG-1″ crew did in making the Sci-Fi/SyFy channel what it is today. A new Stargate show, “Stargate Universe” began this year, even as a rumoed “SG-1″ straight-to-DVD movie is on the shelf.

Stargate Universe” is a much younger, more melodramatic, almost juvenile take on the franchise, and fans are conflicted. Shanks is too, even though he’s slated to appear in at least four episodes this season.

“It is really slick and pretty,” Shanks said. “[But] from what I’ve sene i’m not on board. … I’m not hooked in.”

Shanks said the drama and conflict seems forced. “They’re creating tension, pathos and angst,” he said. “The conflict with the characters seems a bit forced.”

One thing I did not dig deeply into was Shanks’ relationship with Christopher Judge. At the San Diego Comic-Con International in 2008, Judge boasted that he and Shanks started their own production company. We later heard about a production about the archangel Michael. But Shanks said the production company was off. He didn’t discuss his relationship with Judge.

Shanks lives in Vancouver with his wife, the beautiful British-Filipina actress Lexa Doig (Jason X), whom he got to work with when she played a doctor in 11 episodes at the end of “SG-1’s” running. She is also known for her sci-fi/fantasy work. The couple has two children, and Shanks has an 11-year-old Daughter, Tatiana, born in 1998 to then girlfriend Vaitiare Bandera, who played Daniel Jackson’s wife, Sha’re on “SG-1.” Shanks also said he’s been known to enjoy a good game of Hockey — like any true Canadian.

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The Claims For MJ’s Gold Keep Rolling In!

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More $$$$$ woes for MJ’s estate!

How surprising!

The law firm of Mundell, Odlum & Haws claim the late King of Pop owes them over .5 million in legal fees, including a ,144,808.95 promisary note Jackson signed in ‘07.

The firm says their services were provided to Michael from December 2007 to June 24, 2009 – the day before MJ’s death.

Interestingly enough, the legal docs fail to mention what the promisary note was for.

Sketch!

[Image via WENN.]

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“Glee” World Series Game 3 National Anthem [VIDEO]

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The cast of FOX’s musical smash Glee performed our National Anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” before Game 3 of the World Series — New York Yankees vs. Philadelphia Phillies — at Citizen’s Bank Park in The City of Brotherly Love on Halloween night.

Series star Amber Riley (”Mercedes”) belted out the lead, while the rest of the kids contributed background vocals. Great job, guys!



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Top 10 Celebrity Scandals

mackenzie-phillips-raped-by-john-phillips-photosdavid-letterman-apology-to-wife-regina-photosMiley Cyrus Performing at Fedex Forum in Memphis

PopEater came up with a list of the most shocking celebrity scandals of all time that include sex, adultery, incest, indecent exposure and Lindsay Lohan. Two of the biggest scandals were revealed only recently when Mackenzie Phillips confessed her incestuous relationship with her father John Phillips of ‘The Mamas & the Papas’ and David Letterman admitted having sexual affairs with staffers.

Bumpshack took the liberty to add to the list and complete the top 10 with Miley Cyrus, the over-sexualized Disney star. You may ask ‘why Miley?’ and here is the Top 10 reasons for Miley to be included in the scandalous list.

Complete TOP 10 Celebrity Scandals At PopEater>>

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Share Your Gory Details

The human body is a disgusting thing. If you live long enough, something truly horrifying will happen to yours. And when it does, well, you wanna talk about it.

Your friends may be sick of listening to your tales of shattered pelvises, festering boils and dislocated eyeballs, but that doesn’t mean you’re tired of telling them. Local performance troupe Art of Bleeding wants to hear all about it. The group is building a library of real-life medical horror stories and offer a toll-free hotline to anyone who wants to spill their guts. An audio archive of scary stories is available online.

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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Dr. Arnie Klein Is a You Fill In The Blank

Arnie_KleinCan you say loser lowlife? You can? Then you can also say Dr. Arnold Klein. This guy has some nerve. Not only is he allegedly still being investigated in the homicide of Michael Jackson, but now this loser is suing the Michael Jackson Estate for ,000 in unpaid bills. You know, the money that may have been used to feed Michael with his drug habit? How low can anyone stoop? Anything for the money right? This guy continually proves he should be locked up. We hope the Michael Jackson Estate doesn’t pay him. Aren’t they going to be suing him anyway? If they aren’t they should.

We hope they get this dummy and Dr. Conrad Murray out of the public life and throw their a**es in jail sometime soon. How do people like these become doctors?


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Nicolas Cage’s Father Dies

Nicolas Cage with His Parents, August and Joy Coppola, in 1998

I’ve poked a lot of fun at Nicolas Cage in the past, but this post isn’t going to do that. I can only kick a person when they’re down so many times, and Nicolas Cage is now so far down my foot couldn’t even reach him if I tried.

Cage’s father, August Coppola, has died at the age of 75 of a heart attack. Coppola is the brother of filmmaker Frances Ford Coppola and was Dean of Creative Arts at San Francisco State University.

My heart goes out to the family, particularly to Cage who has had more than his fair share of troubles in the past year. Condolences also to the faculty, staff and students of San Francisco State University where Coppola taught literature and served as Dean of Creative Arts. I’m sure he will be missed.

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Heroes: Suicide By Plot Hole

Welcome back, Heroes fans. If you’ve gotten sick of Good Sylar lately, this episode promises plenty of Bad Sylar for your guilty pleasure. Are you a Claire/Gretchen shipper? You’re in the right place. For the rest of us… I’ll try to make this quick and painless. It’s a rainy night in LA (that right there should tell you something weird is going on) there’s a nice fire going and the Parkman Manor windows are all steamed up. The episode title, “Strange Attractors”, is written on the window.

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All we’re missing is Kate Winslet’s hand on the gla**.

Sure enough, there are some Strange Attractors getting their freak on inside. Janice Parkman is taking a ride on the Sylar train. Before you can do more than throw up in your mouth a little, the scene is over and Matt’s waking up. It was all a dream! Or was it? Janice wakes up and makes morning-after eyes at him, so it was really Bad Sylar in charge last night and our Mrs. Parkman has a thing for bad boys. I think I liked Sylar better when he’d rather slice people open than do them. Remember when we all thought he was eating brains? Good times.

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Happy Halloween!

Hello there folks! In case you have not noticed it is All Hallows Eve a.k.a. Halloween
and all the little freak-a-leek kids are out and about collecting candy from their
neighbors. I have the duty of handing out candy since I am 25 and do not fit into
any of the costumes anymore. It is good times though. I also FINALLY got my
Google Wave invite last night and have been f***ing around with that all day.
Be sure to add me to your contacts if you are on there as well. I uploaded pics of my-
self and my nieces carving pumpkins just like I did last year to Facebook.
Connect with me there!

www.facebook.com/notoriousnews

www.twitter.com/notoriousnews
www.myspace.com/notoriousnews
www.youtube.com/notoriousnews

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AFI Festival Review: Everybody Else

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The AFI festival started on a high note last night with Berlin Jury Prize-winner Everybody Else (Alle Anderen), the highly impressive second feature from writer/director Maren Ade. Fearlessly performed by stage actors Birgit Minichmayr (winner of the Best Actress Bear at Berlin) and Lars Eidinger, it is virtually a two-hander that presents a young couple on vacation in Sardinia and charts the tiny frictions, tensions and mismatching of moods that build inexorably to undermine a relationship.

Chris is a long lanky boy with eyes too close together that can simmer with a blue fire of coldness; he is an architect, intellectual and sure of his ideas but professionally insecure. He is less of a free spirit than Gitti, a freckle-faced pixie who is given to speaking her mind but is devoted to him. In one of the opening scenes she pesters him while reading until he eventually tells her, through the medium of a ginger root figurine he made for her, to shut up. It is only the first of many such scenes where their failure to connect is brought about insensitivity to the others current state of mind. They start off as a happy couple, sneaking around like kids from an unwanted neighbour, but almost every scene has a barb, each perfectly observed and presented, which will often result in her natural emotionalism being met with a closed-off coldness. Gitti may bother Chris at inappropriate times, that is only because she wants his attention; his thoughts tend primarily to himself, whilst hers are more oriented towards them. She may tell him he’s an a******, but in a foul mood he will be ungracious towards her attempts to please him and the expression of his displeasure is through lesson-teaching aloofness.

They meet another couple, an ex student colleague of Chris, whose apparently happy relationship puts more cracks in that of the central pair. Chris’s private professions of dislike for Hans vanish, to Gitti’s slight dismay, and she embarra**es Chris with her outspokenness; his reaction to her defense of him is of course is to shut her out. The fine nuances of social interaction are expertly presented, from veiled insults, intended and not, to jokes and stories that fall flat and the small changes to the personality of the individual and of the couple that come with company.

When Chris’s professional uncertainty starts to wane – he is in Sardinia in part to see a potential client – he becomes distinctly easier to live with, but Gitti cannot help noticing that it is because of Hans repeating what she herself had told Chris about the job earlier in the film. When matters come to a head, it is because her reserves of good humour have now run dry. The film is very even-handed in its apportioning of blame to the relationship’s downhill trajectory, and that it is achieved so finely is due to careful pacing, fine performances and superbly pointed writing. It lacks slightly in back story – knowing what brought the two together in the first place would greatly contextualize how they are now coming apart, the strength and weaknesses of the binding ties – but it is highly affecting in the unflinching accuracy of its observation, remarkable in its pinpoint attention to emotional detail and extremely impressive all round.

Rating: 8.69/10

See the trailer at the official site

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