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Emma Watson Debunks Big Rumor

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All hail Emma Watson. The erstwhile Hermione Granger took to Twitter on Saturday night to dispel any notion that she might star in the upcoming adaptation of the S&M novel "Fifty Shades Of Grey," and did it with style:


Watson tweeted more about the rumor on Sunday:


Smiley face emoticon, Indeed. The latest rumor about Watson playing Anastasia Steele in the big screen take on E L James' popular novel trilogy sprouted up thanks to a Twitter account with possible ties to the hacker-activist group Anonymous. The Twitter handle posted documents stolen from German film studio Constanin that mentioned the 22-year-old actress as possible star. (Gossip Cop debunked that claim, noting that Watson is only on the producers' wish list.)

This isn't the first time Watson has been rumored for "Fifty Shades of Grey." The idea that she could star in the film first began circulating last summer, but Watson was quick to shoot the reports down.

"I haven't read the book, I haven't a read a script, nothing," Watson told EW.com in July of 2012. "There are so many movies you become attached to when I've literally never even received a phone call. It was the same way with 'The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo' –- I never even saw a script!"

For now, "Fifty Shades of Grey" remains without a leading actor, actress or director. Universal and Focus Features hope to release the film during the summer of 2014, however, so expect some movement on those fronts soon. For what it's worth, screenwriter Kelly Marcel said earlier this year that she felt the film would receive an NC-17 rating.


PHOTOS: Kate Middleton Almost Trips On Her Heels At St Patrick's Day Parade

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Even royals can't avoid the pesky pitfalls that come with wearing high heels.

Kate Middleton attended the rainy St. Patrick's Day parade at the Aldershot Barracks today, looking absolutely stunning in a green Emilia Wickstead dress coat (the same one she wore last year!), a black hat, the Queen Mother's gold shamrock brooch and Emmy pumps. The only hitch? The duchess nearly fell in her trusty black heels when they got stuck in a grate.

Colonel of the Regiment Prince William, dressed in ceremonial uniform, seemed to giggle while a soldier stood still in salute as Kate was forced to bend down and pull her stiletto out of the drain. Thankfully, it was only a minor malfunction and the Duchess of Cambridge was able to get back to her official duty of presenting sprigs of shamrocks to the 1st Battalion Irish Guards.

Naturally, much of the attention focused on Kate's growing baby bump, which was just barely visible under her pre-pregnancy coat. The 31-year-old reportedly even gave a little insight into the desired sex of the baby during a chat with a soldier in the Guardsmens' cookhouse, according to Guardsman Lee Wheeler:

"I was talking to her about the baby, of course. I asked her, 'Do you know if it's a girl or boy?', and she said, 'Not yet.' She said, 'I'd like to have a boy and William would like a girl'. That's always the way."

Hm, very interesting. Guess that "daughter" slip-up wasn't as telling as we thought. Check out Prince William and Kate Middleton at today's St. Patrick's Day parade -- including the duchess' unfortunate heel situation -- and tell us what you think!

Related: Remember when Kate played hockey in high heels?

PHOTOS:

kate middleton heel stuck

kate middleton heel stuck

kate middleton heel stuck

See more of the duchess' style:

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Gwyneth Paltrow Reveals Devastating Miscarriage

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Gwyneth Paltrow is opening up about a heartbreaking time in her life.

In a candid interview with the Mail on Sunday’s You magazine today (March 17), the 40-year-old actress reveals that she experienced a miscarriage while pregnant with her third child.

Paltrow, who has two children -- daughter Apple, 8, and son Moses, 6, -- with husband Chris Martin, confesses that she "nearly died" after losing the baby.

"My children ask me to have a baby all the time. And you never know, I could squeeze one more in. I am missing my third. I’m thinking about it," Paltrow explains, continuing, "But I had a really bad experience when I was pregnant with my third. It didn’t work out and I nearly died. So I am like, 'Are we good here or should we go back and try again?'"

One thing is for certain -- new parents and Paltrow's pals Jay-Z and Beyonce have made her reconsider getting pregnant again. "Their baby Blue Ivy is totally delish," she gushes. "She’s made me very broody."

The "Iron Man 3" star has been honest about adding to her brood, recently confessing that she thought about having another child when her son Moses was younger.

"My brain says, 'Oh, I think I'm done, the kids are so big now, and I don't want to go back to changing diapers,'" she told the October issue of InStyle magazine. "But a part of me would love to have another. Of course, I'm old now!"

Still, no matter what Paltrow decides in the baby department, she knows she chose the best man to raise a family with.

"Regardless of what happens in our marriage, I chose the best father," she tells You magazine of Coldplay frontman Martin, 36. "He is so good to the children, and to know that you had kids with such a good man is like a real weight off you. We are committed co-parents, we make all the decisions together and we lean on each other for support as well."

Disappearing Act: 'Burt Wonderstone' Flops

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"Oz The Great and Powerful" was the number one movie in North America for the second straight week, grossing an estimated $42.2 million according to figures released by Disney. That puts "Oz The Great and Powerful" at $145 million in total ticket sales, making it the highest grossing release of 2013 so far. ("Identity Thief," which had grossed $120 million going into this weekend, was the previous pace-setter for 2013.) Starring James Franco as the title character, "Oz The Great and Powerful" has earned over $281 million around the globe thus far.

Franco's other film in the marketplace, "Spring Breakers," won't come anywhere near that lofty total, but the indie fever dream was a hot ticket over the weekend in New York and Los Angeles. The A24 release grossed $240,000 from just three theaters, giving "Spring Breakers" a per-screen average of $90,000; that gives "Spring Breakers" a better per-theater start than films like "Lincoln" and "Zero Dark Thirty." Directed by Harmony Korine and also starring Selena Gomez, Ashley Benson and Vanessa Hudgens, "Spring Breakers" expands nationwide on March 22.

The news wasn't as good for Steve Carell and Jim Carrey. The duo's "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone," a PG-13-rated comedy about Las Vegas magicians, finished in a disappointing third place at the box office, with just $10.3 million in ticket sales. That's the worst debut for a Steve Carell film opening in more than 2,000 theaters since the 2004 flop "Sleepover." (That film, it should be noted, came out before Carell rose to fame thanks to "The Office" and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" and featured Carell in a supporting role.) "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" is just the latest Warner Bros. release to scuffle at the box office this year, joining "The Gangster Squad," "Bullet to the Head," "Beautiful Creatures" and "Jack the Giant Slayer" as big disappointments.

Finishing in second place this weekend was "The Call," starring Halle Berry and Abigail Breslin. The film earned an estimated $17.1 million at the box office, giving Berry her biggest non-franchise hit since "Gothika" in 2003.

Rapper Tone Loc Collapses On Stage In Iowa

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Rapper Tone Loc collapsed on stage while performing in Iowa this weekend.

Loc, whose real name is Anthony T. Smith, collapsed after finishing a song during a Saturday night concert on a bridge in downtown Des Moines, according to the Des Moines Register ( ). Three of the newspaper's employees who were at the show said people attended to Loc, 47, for several minutes before fans were asked to leave. http://dmreg.co/ZAFc0j

Loc's condition wasn't immediately clear Sunday. He wasn't listed publicly as a patient at any Des Moines hospital, and no one answered the phone Sunday morning at the bar that sponsored the concert.

Loc's representative did not immediately respond to phone and email messages Sunday.

It wasn't the rapper's first time collapsing on stage. Loc, who is best known for his 1980s hits "Funky Cold Medina" and "Wild Thing," collapsed and had a seizure during a 2009 concert in Pensacola, Fla. Authorities said he had apparently overheated.

Loc also collapsed in 1995 while attending a Los Angeles Lakers game. The reason he collapsed wasn't given.

Loc has also appeared in a number of television shows and movies, including "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective" with Jim Carrey and "Heat" with Al Pacino. Loc has also been the voice of several animated characters.

PHOTOS: 10 Famous Patricks

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Happy St. Patrick's Day!

We're sure you're busy celebrating with a parade or pub crawl, but it's time to take a break from the festivities and take a look at 10 celebrities named Patrick.

Jon Hamm On 'Mad Men's' Anti-Spoiler Policy

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Jon Hamm and the rest of the "Mad Men" cast have become notorious for their anti-spoiler policy in interviews, handed down from show creator Matthew Weiner.

"There are things that I do that I think increase people’s anticipation," Weiner said in a recent Q&A with The Daily Beast. "Not telling you anything is one of them."

It's an ideology that the cast seems to have taken to heart, as Hamm demonstrated during a recent roundtable interview with online press ahead of the show's Season 6 premiere.

"I find it interesting that we've become the standard-bearer for this idea of being secretive, and ... I'm a TV fan, I watch a lot of TV shows; I don't see anybody talk about their season at the beginning of the season. No one does," Hamm pointed out. "It's not like they came out on 'Homeland' and said 'Oh yeah, by the way, here's how it's gonna end -- tune in!' And yet, we're the people who are known as the cryptic secret keepers of all time."

For Hamm, as for Weiner, it appears that the cast is conscious about ensuring that viewers enter the show with as little information as possible in order to heighten their enjoyment. "I think obviously, part of experiencing television, especially in the media landscape that we live in now, is that it's so easy to have the experience be spoiled," Hamm said. "You click on the wrong link or you're reading a thing about [how] maybe there's going to be an 'Arrested Development' movie, and then you see the other links and you go 'Ooh, "Mad Men!" Click' and then it's like an episode summary and you go, 'No, I haven't seen that! What happened? I didn't wanna know that -- I just wanted to know about the Bluths!' And so, it's so easy to disseminate that information instantly and globally, so I think we just try to be careful."

He continued, "We don't want anybody that wants it to not have that experience of seeing it at their own pace. And you can watch TV on your phone now and you can watch it in your car -- please don't, by the way ... and it's personal for people, and I think that people that like the show, like the show, and they want to watch it how they want to watch it."

Hamm pointed out that it's especially important for fans who might not discover the show until after the fact -- something that he has some personal experience with. "I was a late adopter of 'The Wire,' I started with Season 5 and then I watched Seasons 1 through 4 on my phone on a movie set over the course of about two weeks," he said. "It didn't lessen the experience for me because I hadn't read anything, and this was in a pre-Twitter era, I think ... I still am in a pre-Twitter era, but it was just as real for me because I had heard that it was great but had never heard any of the specifics. So I think we can hope that people come to the show however they come to it, but they get to experience it without it being spoon fed to them or told 'oh you have to watch this one and this one, and this is why this means something.' Who wants that? Then it's like homework."

The two-hour Season 6 premiere of "Mad Men" airs Sun., April 7 at 9 p.m. ET on AMC. Come back to The Huffington Post for more from Hamm and co-star Elisabeth Moss ahead of the show's return.

Do you think that spoilers ruin the experience of watching a show, or do you wish the "Mad Men" cast were a little less tight-lipped? Weigh in below!

'Like Tearing Down An Indian Burial Ground'

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BERLIN — David Hasselhoff put his name behind a campaign to preserve one of the few remaining sections of the Berlin Wall, calling it a "sacred" monument to cheers Sunday from Germans who fondly remember his schmaltzy hit "Looking for Freedom" as one of the soundtracks to their peaceful 1989 revolution.

The actor, best known for starring in "Knight Rider" and "Baywatch," joined ordinary Berliners in protesting a real estate developer's plans to move part of the wall to make way for an access path for a luxury housing development.

"It's like tearing down an Indian burial ground. It's a no-brainer," said Hasselhoff, before recounting his own memories of visiting East Germany – grim cities, grim food – shortly before unification.

Plans to move part of the East Side Gallery – a 1.3 kilometer (3/4 mile) stretch of wall painted by artists after the fall of communism and popular with tourists – sparked angry protests earlier this month. Activists have denounced it as part of a wider trend of steamrolling Berlin's tumultuous history to make way for gleaming but soulless developments in the heart of the city.

At least 136 people died between 1961 and 1989 trying to cross the wall that divided the communist-run East Berlin from West Berlin. Most of the wall has since been destroyed, with only two large sections remaining as memorials.

"It's a stupid idea to rip parts of the wall out for luxury apartments," said Roland Junge, one of thousands of locals who accompanied Hasselhoff on an impromptu walk along the wall Sunday.

"This last piece of the wall is really sacred," Hasselhoff told reporters. "It's about people and it's about hearts that were broken, hearts that were torn apart and lives that were lost. That's what we're talking about today, not a piece of real estate."

Asked if he thought his song – belted out by a million people on both sides of the wall during a New Year's Eve concert in 1989 – had played any role in bringing down the most visible section of the Iron Curtain, Hasselhoff said: "Whether it had anything to do with anything, it's a song about freedom and it stuck in their head because it had a good hook."

Berliners can prepare for a reprise if talks involving the developers, authorities and campaigners fail to reach a compromise next week.

"If it goes to the next step, we'll come back with a huge concert and really rock Berlin," said `The Hoff.'

____

Ciaran Fahey and Donogh McCabe contributed to this story.


Kim Kardashian's Baby Bump Has Officially Popped

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Kim Kardashian cradled her blossoming baby bump on the red carpet last night (March 16) at the premiere of Tyler Perry's "Temptation" in Atlanta, Ga.

The reality star, 32, who co-stars in the movie, flaunted her pregnancy curves in a custom-made, black lace gown with an empire waist, which she paired with Kardashian Kolleciton leather leggings.

"Being pregnant is not as easy as my sister [Kourtney Kardashian] made it look or as my mom [Kris Jenner] has made it look," Kardashian told E! News before the screening. "It's a little painful. I've gotten sick a couple times. It's getting a little bit more difficult [to get around]."

But luckily Kim K has been able to relax a bit after her miscarriage scare last week.

"I like to be active," Kanye West's love said. "But I've been chilling out. I took a week off, just to rest and it was amazing."

Check out Kim's baby bump below:

kim kardashian bump

Bad News For Ashton Kutcher

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Audiences excited to see Ashton Kutcher's take on Steve Jobs will have to wait a little longer. As first reported by THR, "Jobs," the new film about the Apple co-founder, will not come out on April 19 as had been expected. Open Road, the distributor behind "Jobs," has yet to set a new release date.

Per THR, the cause of the delay has to do with the fact that there wasn't enough time for the studio to effectively market "Jobs," which was previously titled "jOBS." The film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in January to mixed reviews.

"The story maintains the subtleties of a made-for-TV movie and relates an origin tale with a superficiality one could obtain through a cursory browsing of Jobs' Wikipedia page," wrote Eric Kohn for Indiewire. For his part, Kohn did highlight Kutcher's take on Jobs as one of the actor's finest performances.

"Apple fans are going to be very mixed on 'Jobs,'" wrote Slashfilm's Germain Lussier. "On one hand here’s the story they've been dying to see, on screen, and it looks great. But the film feels slight because it tries to do too much. The effort is there and the film is entertaining, but it’s feels like the PC version of the story instead of the Apple."

"Jobs" was written by Matthew Whiteley and directed by Joshua Michael Stern. The film's official website makes no mention of the delay, but the "Jobs" Facebook page and Twitter account no longer list the April 19 release date.

[via THR]

Regina Weinreich: Sigourney Weaver in Christopher Durang's Whimsical Take on Chekhov

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Whenever I am blue, I can snap out of it conjuring Sigourney Weaver's image as Snow White. That was the take away when I saw Christopher Durang's Chekhovian mash up, Masha, Sonia, Vanya and Spike at Lincoln Center in December. Now the enterprise has moved to Broadway, its Sturm und Drang at a Bucks County country house on a pond successfully transported to The Golden Theater. Act I is a sendup of Chekhovian tropes with prescient views on real estate and familiar philosophical exclamations like "I'm in mourning for my life!" In Durang's whimsical mix master, as directed by Nicholas Martin, the tragic -- and neurotic -- circumstance of everyday life turns to high hilarity.

Weaver's character, Masha, a superstar action hero like Weaver herself -- in the Sexy Killer movies -- makes for a most vulnerable Snow White, too tall, her lips too thin, mistaken for Norma Desmond, BoPeep, a Meissen figure. Coming home to the house she was raised in with her boy toy, Spike (Billy Magnussen), whose sculptural six pack and muscular thighs should be preserved in the Smithsonian, this cougar is at the cusp of keeping up the sexual acrobatics, humping the house's pillars, while suffering this shallow hunk's wanderlust.
In addition to Weaver's superb comic Tony worthy performance, and Magnussen's athletic eye candy, the play features a standout ensemble including David Hyde Pierce, as Masha's brother Vanya, Doc in costume, who in Act II delivers a most resonant ode to the past, extolling the virtues of The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, where, as here on the tranquil pond, nothing happens. Genevieve Angelson as Nina is a charming neighbor who morphs nicely into Dopey as well as an "ethereal" molecule. Shalita Grant as Cassandra, a cleaning lady cum seer, has a way of "seeing," unscrewing her body in a BOING moment: Beware of Hootie Pie, she shrieks, sticking pins into a Snow White voodoo doll.

Kristine Nielsen as whiny sister Sonia, the uh-less beautiful sister, refuses to attend the costume party as a dwarf and as the Evil Queen, channeling Maggie Smith going to the Oscars in a sequined evening gown. Christopher Durang said he knew this actress could do the dame's imitation and wrote in the detail for her.

To stay with the philosophical, what is a thrilling night at the theater? Overheard after a recent standing ovation: When you leave happier than when you came in.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

George Clooney And Stacy Keibler Together After Split Rumors

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George Clooney, who has been filming "The Monuments Men" in Germany, headed out to dinner with girlfriend Stacy Keibler on Saturday night.

Jackson Family Wants $40 BILLION From AEG Live

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It appears the Jackson family isn't letting AEG Live get off easy.

According to TMZ, Michael Jackson's children Prince, Paris and Blanket, along with their grandmother Katherine Jackson, are requesting $40 billion from the entertainment company for the death of their father in 2009.

The family is suing AEG Live -- who sponsored Michael's "This Is It" tour -- for its alleged negligent hiring and supervision of Dr. Conrad Murray, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the king of pop's death.

The kids reportedly want $10 billion for all of the future earnings they claim their dad would have made had he lived, as well as an additional $50 million for various other damages. Still, AEG Live says the Jacksons' billion dollar demand is ridiculous considering Michael's career was in a state of decline after his child molestation allegations. The concert promoter also says their monetary request is based off of rank speculation.

The civil case begins in Los Angeles on April 2.

More Coming From Anti-Obama Filmmakers

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Political rabble-rouser and much-maligned author and documentarian Dinesh D'Souza is teaming up with Gerad Molen, the Oscar-winning producer behind "Schindler's List" and "Jurassic Park" for a new attack on Barack Obama.

THR reports that the duo -- who worked on "2016: Obama's America," an infamous documentary that positioned the president as harboring a dangerous, anti-colonialist streak -- will release "America," a look into what world events would have been like had the United States not existed.

D'Souza and Molen told THR they don't intend the film to be a follow-up, despite simply shaving two words off the first movie's title for the second's name.

"Obama's America" made $33.4 million at the box office on a scant budget of $2 million, making it the second-most successful political documentary in history, behind only Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11." D'Souza's movie is No. 4 on the list of all-time highest grossing documentaries, behind "Fahrenheit," "March of the Penguins" and "Justin Bieber: Never Say Never," though it's worth nothing that "Never Say Never" alone took in nearly double the haul as "Obama's America."

The most famous scene in "Obama's America" sees D'Souza traveling to Kenya to interview Obama's half-brother. THR notes the filmmakers say they have similar surprises for the second movie. “We intend to provide both serious answers and have some fun as we take Obama’s dreams for America to their logical conclusions,” D’Souza said.

D'Souza ran into some personal trouble last year, when he resigned as the president of the evangelical King's College after being accused of adultery. Though he denied the accusations, D'Souza claimed his resignation would rid the school of the distraction.

A teaser trailer for the movie -- which was revealed at this year's CPAC -- is available above.


Jusitn Bieber Shaves HIs Mustache

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Justin Bieber is growing up.

Apparently the 19-year-old pop star finally has the ability to grow facial hair, and needed to share it with the world.

On Friday, he posted a photo of himself on Instagram and wrote, "Growin out the stash lol."

Of course, the 'stache isn't part of Bieber's look, as the manly implication of facial hair has the possibility to tarnish his pubescent, teen heartthrob image, and thus it had to be removed.

"Rip stash," he wrote on Saturday, along with a photo of his freshly shaven face.

BEFORE:
justin bieber mustache

AFTER:
justin bieber mustache


Christina Milian Shows Off Curves In Metallic Orange Bikini

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Christina Milian flaunted her fit figure in a metallic orange string bikini while vacationing in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, on March 17.

The social media correspondent for "The Voice" posed with a group of friends in a snapshot, which she posted on Instagram.

christina milian bikini body

"#springBreakers.. Well kinda lol," Milian wrote, adding that the trip was "spontaneous."

Late last week, the 31-year-old single mom shared another photo of her bikini body, showing off her flat tummy in a white, blue and red two-piece.

christina milian bikini body

Looking good, girl ... looking good.

Thirty Seconds To Mars Reveal Album Details

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NEW YORK — Rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars wanted the announcement for their latest studio album to be out of this world. And that's where the album's first single debuted.

"Up in the Air" was sent to the International Space Station for an exclusive listening Monday. It will be released Tuesday on Earth.

The new album, "Love Lust Faith + Dreams," will be available May 21.

A compact disc containing the song was launched on a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on March 1. The band got to watch the rocket blast into space.

"It was amazing to feel it take off," frontman Jared Leto said in a recent interview. "The noise and the brightness was overwhelming, and you're still a mile away."

Leto said the challenge of sending a song into space paled in comparison to being sued for $30 million by EMI when the band was working on "This Is War," released in 2009, which sold over 500,000 copies. The band also launched an aggressive world tour to promote the CD.

"The last album was about closure. There was a battle and a war that we fought. This one is a new beginning," the 41-year-old singer-actor said.

The new single "has to do with getting to a point in your life where you're ready to let go of the past, embrace change and become more of who you really are," Leto said.

The lawsuit was eventually resolved, and the band has continued working with EMI. Leto said the out-of-this-world debut for the new album was fitting after the enormous weight of the lawsuit was lifted, although sending a CD into space was no easy task.

"Most worthy things are not easy to get done. I think a lot of great things have a tremendous amount of challenge, a tremendous amount of difficulty, and I think this was one of those things," he said.

Leto said he wrote and recorded more than 70 songs before determining the final 12 for the new album.

"My songs must feel like discarded lovers because I'm continuously abandoning time," he said. "But that feels better than being sued."

EMI sued the band in 2008 for breach of contract.

"That $30 million lawsuit in that battle was very real. It wasn't a headline. It was something we thought about every single moment of the day that was there, weighing on us. And not just the fact that we would lose and owe a corporation $30 million, but we would have our creative lives stamped out," Leto said.

Their documentary, "Artifact," chronicles the production of the band's third album.

"The film is highly critical of the record business, but I'm not anti-record label, at all. I'm anti-greed. I'm anti-corruption," Leto said. "I'm pro-artist. I believe that everybody can win. You don't have to steal from one another to do it, or to treat one another unfairly."

"Artifact" won the People's Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival and was recently shown at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas.

While things are back to normal, Leto feels the "cuts are still fresh."

"I think they're healing. But they're definitely not healed yet. It takes some time. The good news is that there's an entirely new group that's running things. It's essentially a new record company," Leto said.

The band, which also includes Shannon Leto and Tomo Milicivic, will begin a world tour in June to support the new album.

Meanwhile, Leto will return to the big screen this year, starring opposite Matthew McConaughey in the AIDS drama, "Dallas Buyers Club."

"I hadn't made a film for five years, and this role came along to play a transsexual in a film about the birth of this horrible plague. I wasn't looking to make a film, or to take five years off, either," Leto said.

A conversation between astronaut Tom Marshburn from the International Space Station and Leto will be available on both the band's and NASA's websites.

___

Online:

http://www.thirtysecondstomars.com

http://www.nasa.gov/

___

John Carucci covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow him at http://www.twitter.com/jacarucci

Denette Wilford: 'Pretty Little Liars' Is Messing With My Mind

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When it comes to TV, we all have guilty pleasures. Sure, sure, many of us are obsessed with acclaimed series like Homeland, The Walking Dead and The Good Wife, but then there are those shows that you would never admit out loud to anyone that you watch them. You know the ones I'm talking about: America's Funniest Home Videos. Snooki & JWoww. The Client List. Anything on TLC.

For me, I'm not ashamed to admit that I love Dancing With the Stars (Season 16 premieres tonight, woo hoo!), The Young and the Restless (Adam Newman, will you marry me?), and even though I'm not a 15-year-old girl, Pretty Little Liars. I've come to to terms with my love of shows that aren't particularly cool (really, it's OK to admit that some bad TV is just so damn good), but while DWTS and Y&R almost never fail to disappoint (though Victor and Nikki's recent hospital weddings have been way too hokey), PLL has confounded me all year.

It's been a long Season 3 for Pretty Little Liars, which began last June. Spencer's unwashed turn into Mehville has been like spiralling down the saddest, muckiest, most depressing rabbit hole ever. And, sorry to be heartless here, folks, but I don't get why.

Yes, I know that Toby was her great love, and the revelation that he is part of the "A" Team (now that was a great show) would devastate anyone, but that still doesn't explain how a strong, independent young woman like Spencer would devolve into the scraggly mess she's become. This unkempt zombie may have learned her boyfriend, whom she confided everything in, is one of the bad guys, but unless I missed an episode, she just took it, accepted it, and never confronted him about any of it. Everything's been about assumptions (albeit, most of them correct), but for Spencer not to lay a verbal smackdown on Toby has been the most baffling. I guess we're supposed to beieve Toby's dead now, thanks to the tattoo on the corpse, but one of the lead characters' boyfriends warrants an on-screen death, so I'm not buying that that's him in the morgue. Not yet, at least.

I have so many unanswered questions. This season has been so convoluted it's like the teenage version of Lost. So, Spencer has since joined the "A" Team, and is (reluctantly?) working with her nemesis, Mona. She even took Ezra's son. What I don't get is why would she join the "A" Team? Spence probably has her reasons, and I'm hoping it has to do with Aria, Hanna and Emily and keeping them safe, but I don't know what she gets out of it.

I also don't understand why the A team is so dead-set on torturing Spencer, Aria, Hanna and Emily. What did they do that was so bad that they deserve even more being thrown at them? Is it just their association with bitchy Alison, or is there more to it? The girls' torturers have already done so much to them, so when will enough be enough? When all four are dead? Because that's likely not going to happen.

Also, who's the girl in the red coat? Some past and present characters spring to mind -- Maya. CeCe. Jenna. Melissa. Alison. Alison's twin? Lucas? (OK, I don't think it's him, but I do wonder where he's been and think he can provide some answers.)

My biggest question, though, is how have the four girls never checked to see if their phones or rooms are bugged? As soon as something, anything happens, one or all of them receive a text from that pesky A. I just don't get how in all three seasons, it's never come up as to how they always get contacted at just the right times.

OK, I've vented. Anyone have answers? What have I missed? Help. Please. I want to be as well-informed as I can before tomorrow's finale. Because if the show's history has showed me anything, I'll be lucky if even one of my queries gets an answer.

The Pretty Little Liars finale airs Tuesday, March 19 at 8 p.m. ET on MuchMusic in Canada and on ABC Family in the U.S.

Sofia Vergara Manages To Tell Us Something We Didn't Know Before

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Save for TMI Queen Jessica Simpson, Sofia Vergara is the most TMI-prone celeb in the biz. Every interview she's ever granted seems to focus on her breasts, her butt and the sizes thereof. We get it, Sofia: You've got a great body.

But leave it to Vogue to wring a few non-body conversations from the garrulous actress. The fashion mag spoke to Vergara for its April 2013 issue and managed to enlighten us about the following:

1. Sofia is unapologetic about the size of her engagement ring. "I love it," she tells the mag, "because it’s big enough. If it had been bigger, I couldn’t have worn it every day... And if it had been smaller, I wouldn’t have liked it. It's heavy, but I don’t take it off even to work out." Rock on, Sofia (ha).

2. Sofia is freezing her eggs.She's discussed the possibility of egg-freezing before, but Vergara confirms to Vogue that she is going through the process (hormone pills, injections) right now.

3. Sofia actually plays a hands-on role with her Kmart line. As in, she sifts through the products and declares, "Thees is heeeedious. Thees is beautiful."

4. Sofia went to dental school. She's mentioned this one before, but somehow (we have no idea why!) it always gets overshadowed by... well, see below.

5. "I am a 32F boob." Fine, had to throw this one in. Lest a single interviewgo by without mention of her bra size.

Sofia also talks about dressing her curvy body, something she never tires of discussing. But the best part of the interview might actually be the photo, which shows her posing glamorously in an industrial-style kitchen wearing a spotted Nina Ricci gown. Sometimes Sofia doesn't have to say anything at all to make a statement.

Read more at Vogue.com and watch a cute behind-the-scenes video.

sofia vergara vogue

See Sofia's signature style:

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Alec Baldwin: The Mighty Quinnberg

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How do I convey this without offending the gay community, or women who are supportive of more women in politics, or those who believe that Michael Bloomberg was a great mayor for New York? It may be impossible, but here goes.

Christine Quinn is not qualified to be mayor of New York.

I know. She was so strong on the marriage equality issue. And New York City has never had a woman mayor before and if not now, when? New York appears to be "greener" than ever before and crime is down. Or so I'm told. As Bloomberg leaves office, he leaves a city that is more polarized than ever by issues of wealth, taxes and how much a city such as New York owes its residents versus what it owes the wealthy corporations that define it as much as its people. However, he also leaves a city that many believe is in pretty good shape, considering the economic buffeting it has taken, along with the rest of the country, over the past five years.

Or, is there a connection here? Is New York a place now so wholly overwhelmed, in a political context, by the demands, whining and blackmail of wealthy individuals and corporations that we accept reports that New York is doing well only when the climate for the very rich is favorable?

Where do the concerns of New Yorkers making below $100,000 a year fit into the policies of the past twelve years?

To assess Quinn is to reassess Bloomberg, as Quinn, by her thought, word and deed, is Bloomberg 2.0. We all remember when Bloomberg, a self-made man who seems to have forgotten what the essence of a self-made man is, told New York, and the world, that in the wake of the economic crash of 2008, we needed him to steer us through that fiscal storm. Never mind that voters had implemented explicit term limits for Bloomberg and his time was up. Never mind that Bloomberg could easily have volunteered his precious financial advice to the city he served for two previous terms without upending those term limits. Bloomberg, it might be assumed, was thinking of running for President in 2012 and better to run for that office as mayor than ex-mayor.

Quinn, whose political ambitions have always left little doubt that she would eventually seek the mayoralty, was Bloomberg's handmaiden. Like the murder of Luca Brasi in The Godfather, Bloomberg simply diverted people's attention from the dangers of killing a voter approved referendum, at times by giving money from his charitable operation to literally buy the silence of potential term limits advocates. But the garotte around the throat of term limits was wielded by Quinn.

Quinn basically had a deal with Bloomberg that he would support her and, as such, is clearly presenting herself now as pro-business, while walking and talking her way across the five boroughs as a populist. Therefore, Quinn has positioned herself uncomfortably over the issues like paid sick leave. The backlash on the sick leave issue has already cost her the support of Cynthia Nixon (one of the stalwarts on marriage equality) and may cost Quinn the support of Gloria Steinem as well, as women are perceived to suffer disproportionately without sick leave reform.

Quinn is married to her partner, Kim Catullo, yet appears to bat her eyelashes for one man, Ray Kelly, New York's police commissioner. "Stop and Frisk" procedures are sure to be a hot topic in the mayor's race, and Quinn wants to be seen as tough on crime. "Stop and Frisk" may be effective anti-crime policy, but it is also anti-U.S. Constitution to a lot of rather vocal political figures in the City and beyond. Quinn appears not to care.

Term limits aren't the only thing Quinn killed. She assisted in bringing down the only hospital trauma facility in the Greenwich Village area when she helped St. Vincent's Hospital to close and sell to developers at Rudin Management, who then contributed to her campaign. Although some note that the St. Vincent's deal ended up being the best of a bad situation, Quinn's other marks regarding housing issues rank from wanting to downright deplorable. Quinn has been dogged by suggestions that she is too cozy, vis a vis a quid pro quo, with specific developers. Quinn backed Jamestown Properties in their bid to build on top of the Chelsea Market in Quinn's neighborhood, over fierce opposition from her own constituents. Jamestown then pledged money to the High Line project, who, in turn, contributed to Quinn. Some say Quinn is also stepping over dollars to save pennies regarding her opposition to the HASA For All Act, which expands housing benefits to more New Yorkers with AIDS.

Democratic opponents of Quinn point to her deflection of issues related to tax increases, assuming that Quinn will continue Bloomberg's program of demonizing any new taxes on some of the country's wealthiest citizens. However, Bloomberg did raise taxes, after 9-11, in order to offset the cost of the avalanche of emergency services and public assistance the attack created. Some candidates believe it's time to raise taxes again in order to address the needs of New York's chronically underperforming school system. According to the New York Times on January 15th, Bill DeBlasio wants new tax money to address the significant gap in early child care with which public school parents must contend. Quinn said in the article that funding for her education spending would come from "redirecting existing Department of Education financing." What good are all of those jobs that Quinn claims she will manifest in New York in the coming years if you have no where to send your young children to learn during the day? Those programs cost money. Quinn is nothing if not vague on where that money will come from.

Another issue that has arisen is Quinn's use of a slush fund that she controls and doles out to Council members as unrestricted, discretionary "member items." The good old Village Voicereported this story and the scandal doesn't seem to be going away. Bloomberg promenaded around New York and dispensed his own cash to buy three elections (the New York Timesreported here that Bloomberg spent over $250 million of his personal money on three elections), to gild his reputation as a steely management type and to upend the voter referendum that would have forced him to run for president in 2012 from an office in Bermuda. Quinn doesn't have that kind of bank account, yet she has found a convenient source of grease for the skids of her own track to take Gracie mansion. Quinn is simply happy to spend the taxpayers' money to buy influence.

Quinn offers a ray of hope on the issue of homelessness, backing a plan by Coalition for the Homeless director Mary Brosnahan to move homeless New Yorkers more effectively into public housing. However, homeless rates in New York are at an all time high while Quinn has led the Council.

Even if Quinn got on her knees and begged forgiveness for the murder of the term limits law, I still regard her as too compromised to become mayor. She is clearly viewed as the frontrunner and many New Yorkers seem downright medicated by the prospect of an openly gay woman as mayor of the "The City." (The New York Times seems to be bending over backwards in their adulation of Quinn, covering her official announcement in March 11th's paper with a photo spread that can best be described as a proud parent's album.)

But as Mike Lupica asked in the Daily News, also on March 11, who cares who the front runner is in March? And none other than Ruth Messinger commented in the Times on January 10 that "New York women don't vote on the basis of gender."

Recently I reread Ed Koch's obituary in The Times, realizing that the pendulum does indeed swing in New York mayoral politics, just like everywhere else. Abe Beame oversaw the ruination of the City's finances. Koch came in and did great work to right that fiscal ship. But by the end of his third term, another economic crash and racial divisions that Koch was unprepared to deal with engulfed New York. Enter David Dinkins. Dinkins once told me, in his own words, that the unions expected more from him. "If they wanted six percent and I gave them three and a half, I had betrayed both sides. With Rudy, they expected nothing, so two and a half percent was a gift." One term for Dinkins, a gentleman to a fault, and out. Enter Giuliani, reshaping the mayoralty to fit his skill set; which meant catching people doing bad things. New Yorkers have always placed crime high on their agenda. Giuliani, a racially tone deaf and essentially unsophisticated man in a city possessing great cultural resources and ethnic diversity, just kept the fear level high and earned two terms.

Then Bloomberg for twelve years. Twelve years of a more muted version Koch's cloying "How'm I doin'?" but emanating from a man who could care less what the public's response was while he hired a chorus of sycophants to provide the answer he sought.

I have known a lot of rich people in my life. And the self-made ones fall into two groups. Those who have money and learn to think and behave like a rich person (fear of change) and those who remain the same person they were before, but they just wait in shorter lines.

As the pendulum inevitably swings again, New York needs a mayor who is three things: one who truly possesses middle class values (whether they be middle class or not), one who is uncompromising in their integrity and one who can genuinely stoke the ineffable spirit that defines New York. A spirit of diversity that says come as you are. A spirit of community that says all for one and one for all, yet encouraging an opinionated, muscular individuality. A great New Yorker once told me "If you are truly one in a million, there are seven other people like you in this town. You can form a club."

In a forthcoming post, I want to tell you why Bill de Blasio is that New Yorker.

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