Muppets Most Wanted stars Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy recorded this special message congratulating the Royal Couple – Prince William and Kate – on the birth of their healthy baby boy.
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Gravity opens in theaters on October 4, 2013.
The Plot:
Dr. Ryan Stone (Bullock) is a brilliant medical engineer on her first shuttle mission, with veteran astronaut Matt Kowalsky (Clooney). But on a seemingly routine spacewalk, disaster strikes. The shuttle is destroyed, leaving Stone and Kowalsky completely alone—tethered to nothing but each other and spiraling out into the blackness. The deafening silence tells them they have lost any link to Earth…and any chance for rescue. As fear turns to panic, every gulp of air eats away at what little oxygen is left. But the only way home may be to go further out into the terrifying expanse of space.
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Look Who’s Talking co-stars John Travolta and Kirstie Alley are going to be back together again, this time on TV Land’s comedy series Kirstie. Travolta will be guest starring on the series, playing a stagehand on Maddie’s (Alley) Broadway show.
Per the network: “After a one-night stand together, Maddie is surprised to find that her fling refuses to be flung.”
Kirstie is set to debut on December 4, 2013. Travolta will be shooting his guest starring role next month and the episode will air later in the season.
“I’m excited about working with Kirstie again, in addition to such terrific talent on the show,” said Travolta. “It’s always a treat to be surrounded by people you respect so much both personally and professionally.”
The Kirstie Plot:
The show centers around Broadway star “Madison Banks” (Alley) whose life turns upside down when “Arlo” (Eric Petersen), the son she gave up at birth, suddenly appears, hoping to connect after his adoptive parents have died. Rhea Perlman (Cheers) stars as Maddie’s assistant and best friend alongside Michael Richards (Seinfeld) as Maddie’s outlandish driver.
Move over Miley Cyrus, One Direction has toppled your short-lived record. VEVO announced today that the British boy band One Direction has snatched the record for the most views in a music video’s first 24 hours with the release of “Best Song Ever.” Cyrus had held the record for her “We Can’t Stop” with 10.7 million views, but One Direction surpassed that by being watched 10.9 million times.
Directed by Ben Winston and starring the boys in various roles, “Best Song Ever” hit VEVO on July 22nd and is the first single off of their third album. The video features Niall as “Harvey, the Studio Exec,” Harry as “Marcel, the Marketing Guy,” Liam as “Leeroy, the Choreographer,” Louis as “Jonny, the Studio Exec,” and Zayn as “Veronica, the Sexy Assistant.”
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Source: VEVO
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The Plot:
America’s most recognizable family is back. The Robertsons have built a multi-million dollar sporting empire manufacturing duck calls in Monroe, Louisiana and have earned a seat in homes across the country with their special brand of downhome practicality, southern charm and sharp sense of humor. Every day affairs are met by Willie’s growing business ideas, Phil’s fatherly advice, Mrs. Kay’s delicious recipes, Uncle Si’s oddball philosophies and Jase’s endless need to hunt, fish and rib his brothers. They are the family that works together, plays together and of course, eats together. The whole family joins in for more adventures on the bayou, where day to day life may be mundane for some, but for the Robertsons, is anything but dull.
In the special one-hour season premiere, the ladies enlist Uncle Si to distract Phil & Kay by taking them on a walk down memory lane while Willie, Jase and Jep set-up a surprise vow renewal for their 49th anniversary. But true to form, Si recalls things differently.
Source: A&E
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Maggie Siff, ‘Tara’ in FX’s critically acclaimed dramatic series Sons of Anarchy, says that when we meet up with her character in season six, she’s in prison. “She is just really interested in getting out and getting her children out. I think when she goes to prison, and her dreams are smashed yet again, I think she decides it’s really not about her anymore – it’s about her children,” explained Siff during our interview at the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con.
Maggie Siff also revealed the reason why she believes Tara is so stuck on Jax that she doesn’t make the wisest decisions.
“They are each other’s first and only real love. The way that I’ve always approached her is that she’s essentially an orphan so these primary relationships, these relationships that she found early on in her life, she can’t shake. And I include Gemma (played by Katey Sagal) in that category as sort of the only mother figure she’s ever known. As crazy of a mother as she may be, she’s the only woman who’s ever served that role in her life. Jax is the only person I think she’s ever felt has known her or seen her.”
iff also talked about whether she believes Tara will be left standing and if she thinks Jax (played by Charlie Hunnam) would ultimately choose the club over her in our video interview (embedded above).

The group has also scheduled upcoming appearances on the Teen Choice Awards on August 11th, Jimmy Kimmel Live! on August 14th, and Good Morning America on August 23rd.
“We’re massively excited about our new single ‘We Own The Night,'” said Nathan Sykes. “It takes us right back to the sound which everyone knows us for and sets the mood for the new album.”
Tom Parker added, “It’s taken us two years to make this album and now that it’s finally finished we are all really proud of the time and effort, not just that we put in to it but all the writers and the label too. We think it’s our strongest album to date. We can’t wait for our fans to hear it. They’ve been really patient but hopefully they’ll think it’s worth the wait!”

Many artists draw from their background, but the music of 19-year-old JJ Lawhorn goes deeper, to embody the sights and sounds, aromas and soul, of rural America.
Raised on his family’s Virginia farm, he never dreamed of knocking on doors up and down Music Row. His plan was to study agriculture at Virginia Tech and devote his life to farming. Then, in the spring of 2010, producer Jeremy Stover came across a Lawhorn performance on YouTube. He tracked the young artist down; within a year, Lawhorn had signed with EMI Publishing and, in June 2011, to Average Joes Entertainment.
Produced by Stover and released on July 16, the 13 tracks of Original Good Ol’ Boy sound the way hay smells and the world looks from the bed of a pickup truck. Lawhorn wrote three of these songs alone and co-wrote the rest, investing each one with the kind of authenticity you can’t conjure in the studio. Some of this stems from his delivery: He drawls “count” as two syllables and nearly stretches “around” to three on his solo-written single “Stomping Grounds.”
And his lyrics are extraordinarily evocative, often beginning with a snapshot-like picture: “Red clay mud caked up on the door” brings us close to the vehicle and its no-nonsense driver on “You Can Tell a Man by His Truck” (written by Lawhorn, Stover and Ben Hayslip).
Ultimately, it’s the whole package — the rough-edged music, the painterly words, and Lawhorn’s conviction — that makes this a most auspicious debut.
IN HIS OWN WORDS
DREAM DUET PARTNER
“Alison Krauss or Chris Stapleton.”
SONG YOU WISH YOU’D WRITTEN
“‘Silver Wings,’ by Merle Haggard.”
TITLE OF YOUR AUTOBIOGRAPHY
“The Road Less Traveled.”
YOUR GREATEST CHALLENGE
“The only challenge I have is to be all that I can be.”
LUCKY CHARM
“I don’t believe in luck. I believe in God’s plan for my life.”
* * * * * * * * *
By Bob Doerschuk
© 2013 CMA Close Up® News Service / Country Music Association®, Inc.

Multi-hyphenate Rita Moreno is being recognized and honored by the Screen Actors Guild as the 50th recipient of the SAG Life Achievement Award. The SAG Life Achievement Award is just the latest in a long list of awards Moreno has earned up over her lengthy, illustrious career, and the ‘Actor’ trophy will share a crowded trophy shelf alongside two Emmys, an Oscar, a Tony, a Grammy, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the National Medal of the Arts.
SAG’s Life Achievement Award is given to an actor who “fosters the finest ideals of the acting profession.” Commenting on Moreno’s selection, SAG-AFTRA Co-President Ken Howard said, “I am simply delighted that Rita Moreno is the 50th recipient of our SAG Life Achievement Award – the most prestigious honor we bestow. She is an extraordinarily versatile, talented and generous actor whose career is notable for its courageous choices and for the breadth, depth and quality of her many demanding and commanding roles. She is a magnificent actor, and I am honored to join all SAG-AFTRA members in recognizing the incomparable Rita Moreno.”
Moreno will pick up the award at the 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards on January 18, 2014.
Details on Rita Moreno’s Life and Career – Courtesy of the Screen Actors Guild:
At 81, Rita Moreno continues to embody the creative diversity that has been the hallmark of her nearly 70-year career. One of only 11 artists and the only Hispanic performer to have won the entertainment industry’s four top competitive awards, she earned her Oscar in 1962 for her iconic portrayal of saucy Anita in West Side Story, a role which drew on memories of the racial taunts she endured as a young Puerto Rican immigrant living in a Bronx “barrio.” Her 1972 Grammy honored her performance on The Electric Company Album, based on the long-running PBS children’s literacy television series on which Moreno played multiple roles in a memorable cast that included Bill Cosby and Morgan Freeman. The Tony came for her 1975 satiric turn as flamboyant, talentless Puerto Rican bathhouse singer Googie Gomez in Broadway’s The Ritz. A six-time Emmy nominee, she won her first of the Television Academy’s honors in 1977 for one of her many guest appearances on The Muppet Show. The following year, she earned a second Emmy for her dramatic guest performance on The Rockford Files.
Over the decades, Moreno has collected dozens of other show business honors, including a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1995. A favorite of Chicago audiences and critics, she received that city’s coveted Joseph Jefferson Award in 1968 as Serafina in The Rose Tattoo and in 1985 was awarded the prestigious Sara Siddons Award for her comic portrayal of Olive Madison in the female version of The Odd Couple. In 1998 she received the first of two National Council of La Raza ALMA awards for her role as Sister Peter Marie Reimondo in the gritty HBO prison drama Oz, as well as the organization’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
Rita Moreno was born Rosita Dolores Alverio in Humacao, a small town near the El Yunque rain forest in Puerto Rico. She lived in nearby Juncos until age 5, when her mother Rosa Maria, a seamstress, moved with her to live with relatives in New York City. Her exuberant dancing around their crowded apartment led to dance lessons with Spanish dance master Paco Cansino, an uncle of Rita Hayworth. While still a child, the young Rosita entertained departing troops with the USO, performed in radio plays and dubbed English-language films in to Spanish.
Moreno made her Broadway debut at just 13 in Skydrift, starring Eli Wallach. After making her film debut under the name Rosita Moreno in the 1950 independent reform school drama So Young So Bad, a talent scout arranged for her to meet MGM mogul Louis B. Mayer. With her mother’s help with wardrobe and make-up, Moreno aptly transformed herself into what Mayer saw as a “Spanish Elizabeth Taylor.” He immediately signed the teen to a contract.
Moreno’s Hollywood career advanced steadily, with early films co-starring such actors as Richard Widmark, Esther Williams, Mario Lanza, Susan Hayward, Tyrone Power and Gary Cooper. She appeared as silent screen vamp Zelda Zanders in the now legendary musical Singin’ in the Rain, starring Gene Kelly. A 1954 photo shoot that was supposed to focus on a TV series pilot starring Ray Bolger instead landed Moreno on the cover of LIFE Magazine, with the provocative headline “Rita Moreno: An Actress’s Catalog of Sex and Innocence.” It drew the attention of 20th Century Fox head Darryl F. Zanuck, who signed her to her second studio contract.
At Fox, Moreno was featured as the tragic Tuptim in the classic The King and I, with Yul Brynner and Deborah Kerr. For the film, she spoke with what she had come to call her “universal ethnic accent”. The King and I marked Moreno’s first film with choreographer Jerome Robbins, who later cast her in West Side Story.
Other significant film appearances include The Night of the Following Day, with Marlon Brando; Marlowe, with James Garner; Popi, in which she played Alan Arkin’s girlfriend; and in Mike Nichol’s production of Carnal Knowledge. She reprised the role of Googie Gomez in the film version of The Ritz, followed by Alan Alda’s The Four Seasons, the award-winning independent film I Like it Like That and the comedy-drama Angus, with George C. Scott and Kathy Bates. She starred opposite Ben Gazzara in Blue Moon and as an Italian widow in the indie feature Carlo’s Wake, with Christopher Meloni. She also appeared in the highly acclaimed movie Pinero, starring Benjamin Bratt, and in John Sayles’ Casa de los Babys. Still one of industry’s busiest stars, Moreno will next be seen in the film version of Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks.
Moreno’s long stage career has included starring roles on both sides of the Atlantic. In London, she appeared in Hal Prince’s 1962 production of She Loves Me and in the 1997 West End run of Sunset Boulevard. In New York, she has starred in Lorraine Hansbury’s The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, opposite Robert Shaw in Gantry and with Jimmy Coco in The Last of the Red Hot Lovers. She received a Tony Award nomination for her role in The National Health in 1974, followed by her 1975 Tony win for The Ritz. Other New York credits include Anne Meara’s After Play; Wally’s Café, with Jimmy Coco; Circle Rep’s Size of the World; and, more recently, the female version of Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple.
Although her early film roles sometimes found her typecast as a Mexican spitfire or Indian maiden, Moreno has since broken the Latina mold many times. Her diverse regional theatre roles include Lola in Damn Yankees, Annie Sullivan in The Miracle Worker, Doris in The Owl and the Pussycat, the proper Englishwoman Charlotte in The Magistrate and Mama Rose in Gypsy. At Berkeley Repertory Theatre, she received rave reviews for her interpretation of Maria Callas in Terrence McNally’s play Master Class in 2004. Two seasons later, she received similar acclaim for her portrayal of Southern belle Amanda Wingfield in Berkeley Rep’s production of The Glass Menagerie. And last fall, she returned to the Berkeley stage for the premiere of her autobiographical play, Life Without Make-up.
Moreno’s current role as Fran Drescher’s mother in TV Land’s Happily Divorced is the latest in a long roster of television performances dating back to a panoply of television anthologies in the early 1950s and continuing throughout her career with numerous guest roles between films and stage appearances. In 1982-83, she starred in her own TV series based on the film 9 to 5. Additionally, she played opposite Burt Reynolds in B.L. Stryker and was a series regular with Bill Cosby on NBC’s The Cosby Mysteries. And in 2007, she starred in the CBS series Cane.
Moreno performs concerts across the country, often appearing as a guest artist with symphony orchestras, as well as in more intimate cabaret settings. In January 1993, she was invited to perform at President Clinton’s inauguration and later that month sang at the White House. In 2002, she appeared as the guest artist with the San Francisco Symphony in a production of Candide. On Jan. 20, 2013, she joined Chita Rivera, Eva Longoria, Jose Feliciano, Raul Esparza and many others in headlining In Performance at the Kennedy Center, an event honoring Barack Obama’s second Presidential inauguration and Latino arts and culture.
In addition to film, stage, television and concert commitments, Moreno fills her spare time by lecturing to various organizations and university audiences. She speaks on such varied topics as The Value of Diversity to our Culture, The Power of Language, Getting Older Without Getting Old and A History of the Arts in Film TV & Theatre.
After her Oscar® win, Moreno came to realize that being a public figure could give voice to important causes. She was among the Hollywood luminaries mobilized by Harry Belafonte to take part in the historic March on Washington on August 28, 1963. She has since been involved with many civic, cultural and charitable organizations and events supporting such important causes as racial equality, hunger, early childhood education, higher education for minority students through such organizations as The Jackie Robinson Foundation and health issues like HIV/AIDS, breast cancer, heart disease and diabetes. Her longtime interest in fitness led to her producing the 1992 exercise video Rita Moreno: Now You Can! Fit and Fabulous Forever.
Moreno has served on The National Endowment for the Arts and as a Commissioner for The President’s White House Fellowships. She has also served as a member of The President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities.
At a White House ceremony in June 2004, Moreno was awarded The Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W. Bush. The medal is the highest honor bestowed upon a civilian and ranks only second to The Congressional Medal of Honor as the nation’s highest award. It is conferred on individuals for a lifetime of meritorious service.
In 2007, Moreno was inducted into the California Hall of Fame by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. In 2010, she was awarded The National Medal of Arts by President Barack Obama as well as the Here I Stand Award for activism in the arts and the HOLA Lifetime Achievement Award. In June 2013 she was inducted into the Great American Songbook Hall of Fame in Indianapolis, where she was honored along with Liza Minnelli, Frank Sinatra and Jimmy Webb.
Moreno’s autobiography, Rita Moreno: A Memoir, was published in March 2013 and instantly became a New York Times bestseller. An edition in her first language, Spanish, will be published in August.

Paramore will be on the road beginning October 15, 2013 for a North American tour titled “The Self-Titled Tour,” kicking off in Seattle and finishing up in Duluth, Georgia on November 27th. The group’s touring in support of their first new album in three years which was released in April 2013.
Joining Paramore on the tour on select dates will be Metric and Hellogoodbye. Tickets go on sale July 26th at LiveNation.com and Ticketmaster.com. Presale tickets are already available for official members of Paramore.net.
Paramore debuted in the #1 spot on the SoundScan/Billboard 200 when it was released and the music video for the latest single, “Still Into You,” has raked in more than 17 million views.
All dates feature special guests Metric and Hellogoodbye except *
OCTOBER
15 – Seattle, WA at KeyArena
16 – Vancouver, BC* at PNE Forum (on sale and support to be announced)
18 – San Jose, CA at SAP Center at San Jose (formerly HP Pavilion)
19 – Anaheim, CA at Honda Center
22 – Fresno, CA at Save Mart Center
23 – San Diego, CA at Viejas Arena
26 – Grand Prairie, TX at Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie
27 – Houston, TX at Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
29 – Independence, MO at Independence Events Center
30 – St. Louis, MO at Fabulous Fox Theater
NOVEMBER
1 – Austin, TX at Austin360 Amphitheater
2, 3 – New Orleans, LA* at Voodoo Experience
4 – Sunrise, FL at BB&T Center
5 – Orlando, FL at UCF Arena
8 – Camden, NJ at Susquehanna Bank Center
9 – Fairfax, VA at Patriot Center
11 – Bethlehem, PA at Sands Bethlehem Event Center
13 – New York, NY at Madison Square Garden Arena
15 – Worcester, MA at DCU Center
17 – Uncasville, CT at Mohegan Sun Arena
18 – Montreal, QC* at Bell Centre (on sale and support to be announced)
20 – Toronto, ON* at Theatre at Air Canada Centre (on sale and support to be announced)
21 – Auburn Hills, MI at The Palace of Auburn Hills
23 – St. Paul, MN at Roy Wilkins Auditorium at St. Paul RiverCentre
24 – Chicago, IL at UIC Pavilion
26 – Nashville, TN at Bridgestone Arena
27 – Duluth, GA at The Arena at Gwinnett Center