MPI/Dark Sky Films has set a June 14, 2013 release date for the third film in the Hatchet series, Hatchet III. BJ McDonnell’s making his directorial debut with the horror sequel which stars Danielle Harris, Kane Hodder, Zach Galligan, Derek Mears, Caroline Williams, and Sean Whalen.
Filming took place on the sequel last May and June outside of New Orleans, Louisiana.
The Plot:
Hatchet III continues the tale of the now-iconic villain Victor Crowley (Kane Hodder). As a search and recovery team heads into the haunted swamp to pick up the pieces and carnage left behind from the first two films, Marybeth (Danielle Harris) hunts down the true secret to ending the voodoo curse that has left the ghost of Victor Crowley haunting and terrorizing Honey Island Swamp for decades.
The winners have been announced for the Western Writers of America awards, with Thomas Cobb’s With Blood in Their Eyes nabbing the title of Best Western Long Novel and Geronimo by Robert M Utley securing a win in the Best Western Nonfiction-Biography category.
The wins mark Cobb’s second and Utley’s third.
2013 Spur Awards Winners and Finalists:
Best Western Short Novel:
Winner: Tucker’s Reckoning by Matthew Mayo
Finalist: Lonesome Animals by Bruce Holbert
Finalist: City of Rocks by Michael Zimmer
Best Western Long Novel:
Winner: With Blood in Their Eyes by Thomas Cobb
Finalist: The Orchardist by Amanda Coplin
Finalist: Country of the Bad Wolfes by James Carlos Blake
Best Original Mass Market Paperback:
Winner: The Coyote Tracker by Larry Sweazy
Finalist: Redemption: Hunters by James Reasoner
Finalist: The Secret of Lodestar by Tim Champlin
Best First Novel:
Winner: Panhandle by Brett Cogburn
Finalist: Wide Open by Larry Bjornson
Finalist: The Orchardist by Amanda Coplin
Best Western Nonfiction Biography:
Winner: Geronimo by Robert M. Utley
Finalist: Ho! For the Black Hills: Captain Jack Crawford Reports the Black Hills Gold Rush and Great Sioux War by Paul L. Hedren
Finalist: “That Fiend in Hell”: Soapy Smith in Legend by Catherine Holder Spude
Best Western Nonfiction Historical:
Winner: With Golden Visions Bright Before Them: Trails to the Mining West, 1849-1852 by Will Bagley
Finalist: Terrible Justice: Sioux Chiefs and U.S. Soldiers on the Upper Missouri, 1954-1868 by Doreen Chaky
Finalist: Deliverance from the Little Big Horn: Doctor Henry Porter and Custer’s Seventh Cavalry by Joan Nabseth Stevenson
Best Western Nonfiction Contemporary:
Winner: Desert Reckoning: A Town Sheriff, A Mojave Hermit and the Biggest Manhunt in Modern California History by Deanne Stillman
Finalist: Colorado Powder Keg: Ski Resorts and the Environmental Movement by Michael W. Childers
Finalist: Desert America: Boom and Bust in the New Old West by Ruben Martinez
Best Western Short Fiction Story:
Winner: “The Hog Whisperer” by John Mort
Finalist “The Saint of Pox Island” by Susan K. Salzer
Finalist: “The Day Delgado Rode In” by Lori Van Pelt
Best Western Short Nonfiction:
Winner: “Marathoner Louis Tewanima and the Continuity of Hopi Running, 1908-1912″ by Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert
Finalist: “Libbie Custer: ‘A Wounded Thing Must Hide’” by Paul Andrew Hutton
Finalist “‘Wearing the Hempen Neck-Tie’: Lynching in Nebraska 1858-1919″ by James E. Potter
Best Western Juvenile Fiction:
Winner: Wide Open by Larry Bjornson
Finalist: Blooming Prairie by Candace Simar
Finalist: And There I’ll Be A Soldier by Johnny D. Boggs
Best Western Juvenile Nonfiction:
Winner: Light on the Prairie: Solomon D. Butcher, Photographer of Nebraska’s Pioneer Days by Nancy Plain
Finalist: The Great Bicycle Experiment: The Army’s Historic Black Bicycle Corps, 1896-97 by Kay Moore
Finalist: Strike!: Mother Jones & the Colorado Coal Field War by Lois Ruby
Storyteller Award:
Winner: Pecos Bill Invents the Ten-Gallon Hat by Kevin Strauss, illustrated by David Harrington
Finalist: The Adventures of Buffalo Joe and The Blackbird With the Broken Wing by Jamie Anne Blake
Finalist: Big Buckaroo and Moose, The Cow Dog by Rachelle “Rocky” Gibbons, illustrated by Jason Hutton
Best Western Drama Script (Fiction):
Winner: Django Unchained by Quentin Tarantino
Finalist: Hatfields & McCoys by Bill Kerby, Ted Mann, Ronald Parker
Finalist: Justified by Graham Yost, Elmore Leonard, Dave Andron, Fred Golan, Benjamin Cavell, Taylor Elmore, Jon Worley, Nichelle D. Tramble, Ryan Farley, Ingrid Escajeda, V.J. Boyd
Best Western Documentary Script (Nonfiction):
Winner: The Dust Bowl by Dayton Duncan
Best Western Poem:
Winner: “Johnny Ringo” by Red Shuttleworth
Finalist: “Night Singer, Chaco Canyon, New Mexico” by Steve Fieffenbacher
Finalist: “Nat Maringo” by Robert Brown
Best Western Audiobook:
Winner: Ring of Fire by Cotton Smith
Finalist: Trouble in Texas by Tom Nichols
Best Western Song:
Winner: “Texas Is Burnin’” by Jim Jones
Winner: “Any Name Will Do” by Mary Kaye
Finalist: “The Last Real Cowboy in Old Santa Fe” by Jerry Faires
I love those weird little yellow guys from Universal Pictures’ Despicable Me and now they’re back for more adventures in Despicable Me 2 coming to theaters this summer. Directed by Chris Renaud and Pierre Coffin, the sequel features returning voice cast members Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Miranda Cosgrove, Russell Brand, Ken Jeong, Moises Arias, Dana Gaier, and Elsie Fisher.
New to the Despicable Me world are voice cast members Al Pacino and Steve Coogan.
The Plot: Chris Meledandri and his acclaimed filmmaking team create an all-new comedy adventure featuring the return of (former?) super-villain Gru (Steve Carell), his adorable girls, the unpredictably hilarious Minions…and a host of new and outrageously funny characters.
Despicable Me 2 opens in theaters on July 3, 2013.
Helen Mirren and Al Pacino in ‘Phil Spector’ (Photo: Phillip V. Caruso)
HBO has set a March 24, 2013 premiere date for Phil Spector, a dramatic biopic inspired by music producer Phil Spector (played by Al Pacino) and defense attorney Linda Kenney Baden. Kenney Baden, played by Oscar-winner Helen Mirren, was Spector’s lawyer during his first trial and the relationship they developed is what writer/director David Mamet explores in this HBO production.
The cast also includes Jeffrey Tambor as the original lead defense attorney and Chiwetel Ejiofor as a mock prosecutor.
Kenney Baden, who served as a consultant on the movie, said this about Mamet’s take on the story: “David Mamet has brought a unique perspective to this case, and it’s been fascinating to watch the process. Al Pacino and Helen Mirren give such amazing performances.”
Mamet explains his approach to Phil Spector: “Like any dramatist, you’re just basically a thief, and you take things that you’ve thought, and things that you’ve heard, and things that you’ve seen, and try to apply some structure to them, so that what you’re doing is kind of like a psychiatrist – you take these dreams which are seemingly random, and re-order them so that they make dramatic sense.”
“This is the first trial of Phil Spector – when he is first accused of this heinous crime,” says Al Pacino. “It’s all new to him in terms of the media – their reaction to it – and his introduction to Linda, who is played by Helen Mirren. And it’s their relationship, in the course of their preparation for the trial.”
And Helen Mirren added, “David sees this story in a more mythological way than as a documentary or docudrama. It’s certainly not a docudrama. We are not saying, ‘This is what happened, and this is what didn’t happen.’ We are not saying that. It’s a mythological story more than anything. I think whenever you have as extreme a personality as Phil Spector was with the kind of history that he had, he is already vilified. He is made into a monster before any trial begins, so I think that was very much the case with Phil Spector, and it does happen in other cases.”
The Plot:
Los Angeles, 2007. The trial of music producer Phil Spector (Al Pacino) for the 2003 death of actress Lana Clarkson is fast approaching. Attorney Linda Kenney Baden (Helen Mirren) arrives at a makeshift command center to meet with a team of defense lawyers, paralegals and assistants presided over by lead attorney Bruce Cutler (Jeffrey Tambor).
Kenney Baden, who is battling flu-like symptoms, agrees to give her assessment of the case, though she seems convinced that Spector, accused of putting a pistol in Clarkson’s mouth and pulling the trigger, is guilty. Cutler debates her opinion and tasks her to use her expertise to find reasonable doubt about Spector’s guilt. Kenney Baden agrees to join the defense team but asserts, “I won’t attack the girl.”
After reviewing case details, Kenney Baden settles into her hotel room to relax, but within minutes is summoned by P.I. Nick Stavros (John Pirruccello) to ride to Spector’s mansion to meet the accused, who is out on bail. Passing through a phalanx of reporters and police, Kenney Baden heads into the mansion, a dark, forbidding fortress surrounded by a chain-link fence and ominous signage about sentry dogs. Inside, she walks through a foyer filled with stuffed owls, a suit of armor, ornate portraits and ancient weaponry, and steps into a room devoted to Abraham Lincoln.
As she takes in the peculiar decor, Spector enters, rambling a bit before explaining that he picked Cutler to defend him because he was the lawyer who got John Gotti off. The two move to a bedroom that contains a barred cell, on whose walls are the outlines of dozens of handguns removed after Clarkson’s death. Asked by Kenney Baden why he had so many guns, Spector replies, “How many pairs of shoes do you have?”
Cutting to the chase, Kenney Baden asks “Phillip” (as she calls him) whether he killed Clarkson. At first, the producer is elusive, changing the subject as he points out his prized possessions: the white piano on which John Lennon wrote “Imagine,” the place where Lenny Bruce used to rant about the Fourth Amendment.
Pressed about the killing, in particular his chauffer’s damning testimony that Spector said, “I think I just killed somebody,” he responds that the man barely spoke English, and that what he actually said was, “I think I should call somebody.” Kenney Baden disputes his description of Clarkson as a “hophead” with the fact that the autopsy results revealed Clarkson was definitely not high on drugs.
After likening his plight to that of Christ and T. E. Lawrence, Spector adds that he can’t even play piano anymore because of severe hand tremors and doesn’t understand how anyone would think that he could hold a gun. Kenney Baden is intrigued by Spector and the challenges of the case, and decides to continue working with the defense team to take another look at the evidence.
The scene outside is a madhouse, chaotic with police, media, angry protesters, and onlookers. Spector is unnerved by the crowd as he is taken into the courtroom. However, as the prosecution outlines its case, he seems lost in musical thought, scribbling notes to an unheard song on a legal pad.
Back at the defense team headquarters, Kenney Baden watches through a one-way mirror as Dr. Fallon (Rebecca Pidgeon) shows members of a defense focus group video of testimony that emphasizes Spector’s proclivity for erratic, gun-wielding behavior. Cutler and Kenney Baden deliberate how to get a jury to consider the possibility that reasonable doubt exists.
While exploring the forensic evidence in the case, Kenney Baden’s team organizes an elaborate demonstration to test a theory that might work towards showing Spector’s innocence. However, Kenney Baden realizes the judge will not allow such a demonstration inside the courtroom. Kenney Baden and Cutler rehearse a forensic expert, Dr. Gerhardt Spitz (Matt Malloy), to testify about the gunshot wound.
At the mansion, Spector tells Kenney Baden that he wants to tell his story on the witness stand. “I was drunk,” he insists, adding that when he took Lana home, she asked to see his guns, claiming that they excited her, which led to the gun going off accidentally. Later, Kenney Baden tests Spector’s claim to determine if there is any plausibility to his version of the events that happened that fateful night.
Despite having given his prior consent, Spector is livid when he learns that Cutler is leaving Kenney Baden to handle the final trial preparations. She considers the merits of putting Spector on the stand to testify and stages a dress rehearsal, complete with a badgering mock prosecutor (Chiwetel Ejiofor), who presents video testimony of Ronnie Spector, Spector’s onetime protégé and former wife, describing his repeated cruelties and assaults.
Unhinged, Spector erupts and abruptly puts an end to the faux trial, eventually calming down enough to assure Kenney Baden he’ll be fine during the real thing. But the experience is enough to give her pause as to whether she should allow her star witness to testify in his own defense.
On trial day, when Spector shows up at the courthouse wearing a huge, over-the-top Afro wig, Kenney Baden realizes she cannot put him on the stand, despite the knowledge that Spector’s silence could spell defeat for the defense team and prison for her client.
The cards at the end of the film read:
“On September 26, the jury reported itself deadlocked, ten to two in favor of conviction, and incapable of reaching a decision. The Judge declared a mistrial. On October 3, the Prosecution announced that they would retry the case.
Due to her illness, Linda Kenney Baden was unable to participate in the second trial, whose jury, on April 13, 2009 found Phil Spector guilty of Second Degree Murder and sentenced him to 19 years to life in Corcoran State Prison, where he resides today.”
Kacey Musgraves - Photo Credit: Kelly Christine Musgraves
One strength of Country Music is its ability to mirror real life. Rarer is the artist whose stories come to us not washed in neon but raised from a deeper, dreamier place.
Kacey Musgraves is one such anomaly. Born in Mineola, Texas, she made her performing debut at 8. A year later, she wrote her first song. She appeared on Nashville Star in 2007 and moved to Nashville shortly after that, just 20 years old.
As a writer, she’s made a good start, placing songs with Miranda Lambert (“Mama’s Broken Heart”) and Martina McBride (“When You Love a Sinner”). A co-write with Trent Dabbs, “Undermine,” played on the second episode of ABC’s Nashville.
With her March 19 debut on Mercury Nashville, produced by Musgraves, Shane McAnally and Luke Laird, she’s about to make her own big impact — in a distinctively quiet way. Musgraves doesn’t crank up the volume. Her grooves move gently, more like the trickle of a brook than a wide river’s roar. Banjo adds to the Country flavor of her work, but it’s played sparely, more about atmosphere than momentum. She frames it with an electric guitar’s faraway weep and floats wispy electronic clouds above this pastoral soundscape.
That’s only the beginning. Her writing style is fully formed, with each track either a solo or co-written piece. On her first single, “Merry Go ‘Round” (Musgraves, McAnally and Josh Osborne), she spins her tale of family dysfunction with equal parts irony and insight, weary wisdom and sad humor. She won a standing ovation when she introduced it at CRS 2012 — the first, surely, of many to come.
IN HER OWN WORDS
DREAM DUET PARTNER
“There are so many: Willie Nelson, Loretta Lynn, Buddy Miller – and also James Mercer of the Shins. I love his voice.”
WORDS YOU SAY OVER AND OVER AGAIN
“‘It Is What It Is’ and ‘Dude.’”
PET PEEVE
“People who try to sound way more Country than they are.”
ACTRESS TO PORTRAY YOU IN A BIOPIC
“Rashida Jones.”
BOOK ON YOUR NIGHTSTAND
“Steve Earle’s I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive.”
ITEMS IN YOUR PERSONAL TIME CAPSULE
“My favorite old, turquoise cowboy boots, my 1957 Gibson J-45 (Janice) and the complete discography of John Prine.”
Fox has altered their schedule a wee bit, announcing new season finale dates for Kitchen Nightmares, New Girl, The Mindy Project, and Touch. The final episodes of the season have been pushed back for some of the network’s shows, while others will stay put on their previously-announced last air dates for this season.
FOX 2013 SEASON FINALE AND SUMMER SCHEDULE
MONDAY
Monday, April 29:
8:00-9:00 PM BONES (Season Finale)
9:00-10:00 PM THE FOLLOWING (Season Finale)
Monday, May 6:
8:00-9:00 PM BONES (Encore Episode)
9:00-10:00 PM BONES (Encore Episode)
Monday, May 13:
8:00-10:00 PM HELL’S KITCHEN (All-New Special Two-Hour Monday Episode)
Mondays, beginning May 20:
8:00-8:30 PM RAISING HOPE (Encore)
8:30-9:00 PM THE GOODWIN GAMES (Series Premiere)
9:00-9:30 PM NEW GIRL (Encore)
9:30-10:00 PM THE MINDY PROJECT (Encore)
TUESDAY
Tuesday, May 7:
8:00-9:00 PM HELL’S KITCHEN (All-New Episode)
9:00-9:30 PM NEW GIRL (All-New Episode)
9:30-10:00 PM THE MINDY PROJECT (All-New Episode)
Tuesday, May 14:
8:00-9:00 PM SO YOU THINK YOU CAN DANCE (One-Hour Season Premiere)
9:00-9:30 PM NEW GIRL (Season Finale)
9:30-10:00 PM THE MINDY PROJECT (Season Finale)
Tuesdays, beginning May 21:
8:00-10:00 PM SO YOU THINK YOU CAN DANCE (All-New Episode)
WEDNESDAY
Wednesday, May 15:
8:00-9:00 PM AMERICAN IDOL (Season Finale, Part One; ET live/PT tape-delayed)
9:00-10:00 PM DOES SOMEONE HAVE TO GO (Series Preview)
Wednesdays, beginning May 22:
8:00-10:00 PM MASTERCHEF (Season Premiere)
THURSDAY
Thursday, May 9:
8:00-9:00 PM AMERICAN IDOL (All-New; ET live/PT tape-delayed)
9:00-10:00 PM GLEE (Season Finale)
Thursday, May 16:
8:00-10:07 PM AMERICAN IDOL (Season Finale, Part Two; ET live/PT tape-delayed)
Thursdays, beginning May 23:
8:00-9:00 PM DOES SOMEONE HAVE TO GO (Series Premiere)
9:00-10:00 PM HELL’S KITCHEN (Time Period Premiere)
FRIDAY
Friday, April 5:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Encore)
9:00-10:00 PM TOUCH (All-New)
Fridays, beginning April 12:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Encore Episode)
9:00-10:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Encore Episode)
Fridays, beginning April 26:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (All-New)
9:00-10:00 PM TOUCH (All-New)
Friday, May 10:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Season Finale)
9:00-10:00 PM TOUCH (Season Finale)
Friday, May 17:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Encore)
9:00-10:00 PM BONES (Encore)
Fridays, beginning May 24:
8:00-9:00 PM KITCHEN NIGHTMARES (Encore)
9:00-10:00 PM THE FOLLOWING (Encore)
SATURDAY
Saturday, May 4:
8:00-9:00 PM COPS (One-Hour Season Finale)
9:00-10:00 PM THE FOLLOWING (Encore)
11:00 PM-12:30 AM ENCORES
Saturday, May 11:
6:00 PM-CC NASCAR ON FOX – DARLINGTON 500
11:00 PM-12:30 AM ENCORES
Saturday, May 18:
8:00-10:00 PM COPS (Encores)
11:00 PM-12:30 AM ENCORES
Saturdays, beginning May 25:
6:30 PM-CC FOX SPORTS SATURDAYS: BASEBALL ’13
11:00 PM-12:30 AM ENCORES
Saturdays, beginning July 27:
6:30 PM-CC FOX SPORTS SATURDAYS: BASEBALL ’13
11:00 PM-12:30 AM ANIMATION DOMINATION HIGH-DEF (Series Premiere)
SUNDAYS
Sunday, May 12:
7:00-7:30 PM THE SIMPSONS (Encore)
7:30-8:00 PM THE CLEVELAND SHOW (All-New)
8:00-8:30 PM THE SIMPSONS (All-New)
8:30-9:00 PM BOB’S BURGERS (Season Finale)
9:00-9:30 PM FAMILY GUY (All-New)
9:30-10:00 PM AMERICAN DAD (Season Finale)
Sunday, May 19:
7:00-8:00 PM THE CLEVELAND SHOW (One-Hour Season Finale; Two All-New Episodes)
8:00-9:00 PM THE SIMPSONS (One-Hour Season Finale; Two All-New Episodes)
9:00-10:00 PM FAMILY GUY (One-Hour Season Finale; Two All-New Episodes)
Oscar and Grammy winning singer/actress Jennifer Hudson will be honored by The Recording Academy at the Grammys On The Hill Awards to be held on April 17, 2013. According to the official announcement, Hudson will receive an award for her generosity as a philanthropist as well as her artistic achievements.
“We are elated to recognize Jennifer Hudson as not only a gifted musician and actress but as an extraordinary humanitarian who has selflessly contributed her time and talent to numerous worthwhile causes,” stated Recording Academy President/CEO Neil Portnow making the announcement. “She is one of the industry’s most enduring, giving and gifted women, and we are privileged to be honoring her artistry, her commitment, and her generosity.”
Hudson will receive The Academy’s Recording Artists’ Coalition Award (named for The Academy’s artists’ rights program founded by Don Henley and Sheryl Crow) at the special event on April 17th. Proceeds from the gala will benefit the GRAMMY Foundation(®)’s Signature Schools.
About Jennifer Hudson [Courtesy of The Recording Academy]:
An Academy Award-winning actress, GRAMMY Award-winning recording artist and bestselling author, Jennifer Hudson is an extraordinary talent. From humble beginnings, Hudson began singing in a small Chicago church where, week after week, she brought the congregation to its feet. From there, she’s gone on to worldwide acclaim.
In 2007, Hudson won an Academy Award for her role as Effie in the smash hit Dreamgirls, an adaptation of the Broadway musical. Her breakout film performance also garnered her a Golden Globe Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, a BAFTA, and an NAACP Image Award. She was also honored by the Broadcast Film Critics Association, the National Board of Review, and was named Entertainer of the Year at the Soul Train Awards.
Hudson also received an NAACP Image Award nomination in 2009 for her role in Fox Searchlight’s The Secret Life of Bees, co-starred in the box-office hit Sex and the City, and was most recently seen in the Farrelly brothers’ comedy The Three Stooges.
Hudson has made the same kind of impact in the world of music with the successful release of both of her Arista Records albums. In 2008, her debut self-titled album won a GRAMMY for Best R&B Album, which was presented by one of Hudson’s idols, Whitney Houston. The RIAA gold-certified album entered the Billboard Top 200 at No. 2, marked the biggest first week sales for an R&B female entry since 2004, and has since sold more than 1.1 million albums worldwide to date. Most recently, she released her sophomore album, I Remember Me, in 2011, to rave reviews. The album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Top 200 and the R&B Albums charts, and has since been certified gold by the RIAA.
In 2009, Jennifer, along with her sister Julia, founded the Julian D. King Gift Foundation in loving memory of her nephew and her sister’s son Julian, who they lost in 2008. As a catalyst for change in children’s health, education and welfare, the Foundation exists to provide stability, support and positive experiences for children of all backgrounds so that they will become productive, confident and happy adults. The work of the foundation is carried out through fund raising events, the content and proceeds of which are used to support and encourage the positive development of children. Jennifer and Julia have thus far hosted four annual toy drives at Christmas for less fortunate children in the Chicago area as well as founding Hatch Day in 2011, an annual back-to-school supply drive, which takes place in August on Julian’s birthday, to make sure all children start their school year with the supplies they need.
Most recently, Hudson finished production on several feature films, all of which are expected to be released this year. She also filmed three episodes for a guest-starring arc on NBC’s acclaimed series Smash, which just returned for its second season in February 2013. This spring, Hudson can also be seen in Lifetime’s series of short films, Call Me Crazy, a follow-up to the critically acclaimed Five, an anthology on the impact of breast cancer.
Expanding her talents in the arts, Hudson added author and clothing designer to her list of talents in 2012. In January she published her inspirational bestselling memoir, I Got This: How I Changed My Ways, Found Myself And Lost Everything That Weighed Me Down, and then she launched her first clothing line the Jennifer Hudson Collection, which debuted on QVC in September 2012. Additionally, Hudson has been the national spokesperson for Weight Watchers since 2010.
Ray Lewis (AP Photo)Ray Lewis won’t be puttering around his house or getting addicted to daytime TV or surfing the internet following his retirement from the NFL. ESPN has locked in the 12-time Pro Bowler as a studio analyst who’ll be appearing on the Monday Night Countdown and Sunday NFL Countdown as well as other NFL broadcasts.
Lewis finished up his playing career with the Baltimore Ravens by helping the team win the 2013 Super Bowl, and among his new duties at ESPN will be working on the network’s Super Bowl coverage team. According to ESPN, Lewis will also be hitting the road each week to join Stuart Scott, Hall of Famer Steve Young and Trent Dilfer during the pre-game Countdown and post-game SportsCenter.
The newly-retired Lewis will also be making a weekly appearance on ESPN Radio’s Mike and Mike in the Morning.
“Ray is a tremendous addition to our NFL roster and he will have an immediate impact on our coverage,” stated John Wildhack, ESPN executive vice president, production. “One of the most accomplished players in NFL history, fans will be drawn to his knowledge, experience and, of course, the passion he always exudes for the game.”
Lewis added: “ESPN is such a big part of how fans watch and experience sports, especially the NFL, so I’m excited to join their team. I’m ready to bring the same level of passion to this next phase of my life as I brought to the field during my years as a player. I can’t wait to work with my new teammates, many of whom I’ve already known for years.”
Special guest Rihanna performs during the season 11 AMERICAN IDOL GRAND FINALE at the Nokia Theatre on Weds. May 23, 2012 in Los Angeles, California. CR: Michael Becker/FOX
Fox has set a May 6, 2013 premiere date for the concert documentary Rihanna 777. The documentary takes a behind-the-scenes look at the singer’s concert tour that made its way through seven countries in “seven days with seven shows to promote her seventh album.”
The premiere screening of Rihanna 777 will air at 8pm ET/PT.
Details on the Documentary [Courtesy of Fox]: Filling a 777 jet with 256 die-hard fans and international journalists, Rihanna began a thrilling nonstop performance tour on November 14, 2012, traveling to Mexico City, Toronto, Stockholm, Paris, Berlin, London and New York City to promote her album, Unapologetic. The album debuted at No.1 on the Billboard 200, with her single, “Diamonds,” reaching No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 the day after the 777 tour ended.
The entire tour was documented by a film crew, offering fans stellar performances of her greatest hits in glamorous locales. The film also provides an inside look at the singer’s ambitious and often turbulent tour, from the sound of popping champagne corks on the plane, to the backstage chaos, to the singer’s special worldwide appearances.
A scene from 'Ender's Game' - Photo Courtesy of Summit EntertainmentHugo star Asa Butterfield has been named the CinemaCon Rising Star of 2013 and will pick up the honor at a gala event on April 18th in Las Vegas. CinemaCon is a gathering of 5,000 motion picture theatre industry members and during the event numerous film studios present details and clips from their upcoming major theatrical releases. Also during the event the theatre industry members bestow awards on filmmakers and actors, with Butterfield the latest actor named to receive an award.
Announcing Butterfield’s Rising Star award, Managing Director Mitch Neuhauser stated: “With a stunning turn in the title role of Hugo, Butterfield has already proven himself as one to watch in Hollywood. In a short time, he has already endured himself to audiences and critics alike with his captivating on-screen performances, and I cannot think of a young actor more deserving to be this year’s CinemaCon Rising Star.”
Butterfield will next be seen in Summit Entertainment’s Ender’s Game which will open in theaters on November 1, 2013. His credits also include The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Son of Rambow, The Wolfman, and Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang.