Jump to July 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 ... 12
  • Celebrated author, playwright Gore Vidal dies at 86

    The author of 25 novels, who also wrote for TV, theater and film, was 85-years-old. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Updated at 3:40 a.m. ET: Author, playwright, politician and commentator Gore Vidal, whose vast and sharpened range of published works and public remarks were stamped by his immodest wit and unconventional wisdom, died Tuesday at age 86 in Los Angeles.

    Franco Origlia / Getty Images file

    Author Gore Vidal in 2004.

    Vidal died at his home in the Hollywood Hills at about 6:45 p.m. of complications from pneumonia, his nephew Burr Steers said. Vidal had been living alone in the home and had been sick for "quite a while," Steers said.

    In a world more to his liking, Vidal might have been president, or even king. He had an aristocrat's bearing — tall, handsome and composed — and an authoritative baritone ideal for summoning an aide or courtier.

    But Vidal made his living — a very good living — from challenging power, not holding it. He was wealthy and famous and committed to exposing a system often led by men he knew firsthand. During the days of Franklin Roosevelt, one of the few leaders whom Vidal admired, he might have been called a "traitor to his class." The real traitors, Vidal would respond, were the upholders of his class.

    Vidal "meant everything to me when I was learning how to write and learning how to read," Dave Eggers said at the 2009 National Book Awards ceremony, where he and Vidal received honorary citations. "His words, his intellect, his activism, his ability and willingness to always speak up and hold his government accountable, especially, has been so inspiring to me I can't articulate it."

    A genuine celebrity
    Along with such contemporaries as Norman Mailer and Truman Capote, he was among the last generation of literary writers who were also genuine celebrities — regulars on talk shows and in gossip columns, personalities of such size and appeal that even those who hadn't read their books knew their names.

    His works included hundreds of essays, the best-selling novels "Lincoln" and "Myra Breckenridge" and the Tony-nominated play "The Best Man," a melodrama about a presidential convention revived on Broadway in 2012. Vidal appeared cold and cynical on the surface, dispassionately predicting the fall of democracy, the American empire's decline or the destruction of the environment. But he bore a melancholy regard for lost worlds, for reason and the primacy of the written word, for "the ancient American sense that whatever is wrong with human society can be put right by human action."

    Vidal was uncomfortable with the literary and political establishment, and the feeling was mutual. Beyond his honorary National Book Award, he won few major writing prizes, lost both times he ran for office and initially declined membership into the American Academy of Arts and Letters, joking that he already belonged to the Diners Club. (He was eventually admitted, in 1999).

    But he was widely admired as an independent thinker — in the tradition of Mark Twain and H.L. Mencken — about literature, culture, politics and, as he liked to call it, "the birds and the bees." He picked apart politicians, living and dead; mocked religion and prudery; opposed wars from Vietnam to Iraq and insulted his peers like no other, once observing that the three saddest words in the English language were "Joyce Carol Oates." (The happiest words: "I told you so").

    Ralph Ellison labeled him a "campy patrician." Vidal had an old-fashioned belief in honor, but a modern will to live as he pleased. He wrote in the memoir "Palimpsest" that he had more than 1,000 "sexual encounters," nothing special, he added, compared to the pursuits of such peers as John F. Kennedy and Tennessee Williams. Vidal was fond of drink and alleged that he had sampled every major drug, once. He never married and for decades shared a scenic villa in Ravello, Italy, with companion Howard Austen.

    High-profile friends
    In print and in person, he was a shameless name dropper, but what names! John and Jacqueline Kennedy. Hillary Clinton. Tennessee Williams. Mick Jagger. Orson Welles. Frank Sinatra. Marlon Brando. Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon.

    Vidal dined with Welles in Los Angeles, lunched with the Kennedys in Florida, clowned with the Newmans in Connecticut, drove wildly around Rome with a nearsighted Williams and escorted Jagger on a sightseeing tour along the Italian coast. He campaigned with Eleanor Roosevelt and Harry Truman. He butted heads, literally, with Mailer. He helped director William Wyler with the script for "Ben-Hur." He made guest appearances on everything from "The Simpsons" to "Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In."

    Cbs Photo Archive / Getty Images file

    Gore Vidal, left, talks with television journalist Mike Wallace in New York on April 6, 1978.

    Vidal formed his most unusual bond with Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. The two exchanged letters after Vidal's 1998 article in Vanity Fair on "the shredding" of the Bill of Rights and their friendship inspired Edmund White's play "Terre Haute."

    "He's very intelligent. He's not insane," Vidal said of McVeigh in a 2001 interview.

    Vidal also bewildered his fans by saying the Bush administration likely had advance knowledge of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks; that McVeigh was no more a killer than Dwight Eisenhower and that the United States would eventually be subservient to China, "The Yellow Man's Burden."

    Christopher Hitchens, who once regarded Vidal as a modern Oscar Wilde, lamented in a 2010 Vanity Fair essay that Vidal's recent comments suffered from an "utter want of any grace or generosity, as well as the entire absence of any wit or profundity." Years earlier, Saul Bellow stated that "a dune of salt has grown up to season the preposterous things Gore says."

    A self-educated man
    A longtime critic of American militarism, Vidal was, ironically, born at the United States Military Academy in West Point, N.Y., his father's alma mater. Vidal grew up in a political family. His grandfather, Thomas Pryor Gore, was a U.S. senator from Oklahoma. His father, Gene Vidal, served briefly in President Franklin Roosevelt's administration and was an early expert on aviation. Amelia Earhart was a family friend and reported lover of Gene Vidal.

    Vidal was a learned, but primarily self-educated man. Classrooms bored him. He graduated from the elite Phillips Exeter Academy, but then enlisted in the Army and never went to college. His first book, the war novel "Williwaw," was written while he was in the service and published when he was just 20.

    Getty Images file

    Vidal, circa 1955.

    The New York Times' Orville Prescott praised Vidal as a "canny observer" and "Williwaw" as a "good start toward more substantial accomplishments." But "The City and the Pillar," his third book, apparently changed Prescott's mind. Published in 1948, the novel's straightforward story about two male lovers was virtually unheard of at the time and Vidal claimed that Prescott swore he would never review his books again. (The critic relented in 1964, calling Vidal's "Julian" a novel "disgusting enough to sicken many of his readers"). "City and the Pillar" was dedicated to "J.T.," Jimmie Trimble, a boarding school classmate killed during the war whom Vidal would cite as the great love of his life.

    Unable to make a living from fiction, at least when identified as "Gore Vidal," he wrote a trio of mystery novels in the 1950s under the pen name "Edgar Box" and also wrote fiction as "Katherine Everard" and "Cameron Kay." He became a playwright, too, writing for the theater and television. "The Best Man," which premiered in 1960, was made into a movie starring Henry Fonda. Paul Newman starred in "The Left-Handed Gun," a film adaptation of Vidal's "The Death of Billy the Kid."

    Slideshow: The latest in Celebrity Sightings

    Vidal also worked in Hollywood, writing the script for "Suddenly Last Summer" and adding a subtle homoerotic context to "Ben-Hur." The author himself later appeared in a documentary about gays in Hollywood, "The Celluloid Closet." His acting credits included "Gattaca," "With Honors" and Tim Robbins' political satire, "Bob Roberts."

    But Vidal saw himself foremost as a man of letters. He wrote a series of acclaimed and provocative historical novels, including "Julian," "Burr" and "Lincoln." His 1974 essay on Italo Calvino in The New York Review of Books helped introduce the Italian writer to American audiences. A 1987 essay on Dawn Powell helped restore the then-forgotten author's reputation and bring her books back in print. Fans welcomed his polished, conversational essays or his annual "State of the Union" reports for the liberal weekly "The Nation."

    He adored the wisdom of Montaigne, the imagination of Calvino, the erudition and insight of Henry James and Edith Wharton. He detested Thomas Pynchon, John Barth and other authors of "teachers' novels." He once likened Mailer's views on women to those of Charles Manson's. (From this the head-butting incident ensued, backstage at "The Dick Cavett Show.") He derided Buckley, on television, as a "crypto Nazi." He was accused of anti-Semitism after labeling conservative Norman Podhoretz a member of "the Israeli fifth column." He labeled Ronald Reagan "The Acting President" and identified Reagan's wife, Nancy, as a social climber "born with a silver ladder in her hand."

    Political candidate
    In the 1960s, Vidal increased his involvement in politics. In 1960, he was the Democratic candidate for Congress in an upstate New York district, but was defeated despite Ms. Roosevelt's active support and a campaign appearance by Truman. (In 1982, Vidal came in second in the California Democratic senatorial primary). In consolation, he noted that he did receive more votes in his district in 1960 than did the man at the top of the Democratic ticket, John F. Kennedy.

    Thanks to his friendship with Jacqueline Kennedy, with whom he shared a stepfather, Hugh Auchincloss, he became a supporter and associate of President Kennedy, and wrote a newspaper profile on him soon after his election. With tragic foresight, Vidal called the job of the presidency "literally killing" and worried that "Kennedy may very well not survive."

    Before long, however, he and the Kennedys were estranged, touched off by a personal feud between Vidal and Robert Kennedy apparently sparked by a few too many drinks at a White House party. By 1967, the author was an open critic, portraying the Kennedys as cold and manipulative in the essay "The Holy Family." Vidal's politics moved ever to the left and he eventually disdained both major parties as "property" parties — even as he couldn't help noting that Hillary Clinton had visited him in Ravello.

    Historical works
    Meanwhile, he was again writing fiction. In 1968, he published his most inventive novel, "Myra Breckenridge," a comic best seller about a transsexual movie star. The year before, with "Washington, D.C.," Vidal began the cycle of historical works that peaked in 1984 with "Lincoln."

    The novel was not universally praised, with some scholars objecting to Vidal's unawed portrayal of the president. The author defended his research, including suggestions that the president had syphilis, and called his critics "scholar-squirrels," more interested in academic status than in serious history.

    But "Lincoln" stands as his most notable work of historical fiction, vetted and admired by a leading Lincoln biographer, David Herbert Donald, and even cited by the conservative Newt Gingrich as a favorite book. Gingrich's praise was contrasted by fellow conservative Rep. Michele Bachmann, who alleged she was so put off by Vidal's "Burr" that she switched party affiliation from Democrat to Republican.

    In recent years, Vidal wrote the novel "The Smithsonian Institution" and the nonfiction best sellers "Perpetual War For Perpetual Peace" and "Dreaming War: Blood for Oil and the Cheney-Bush Junta." A second memoir, "Point to Point Navigation," came out in 2006. In 2009, "Gore Vidal: Snapshots in History's Glare" featured pictures of Vidal with Newman, Jagger, Johnny Carson, Jack Nicholson and Bruce Springsteen.

    Ulf Andersen / Getty Images file

    Vidal at home in Italy in 1993.

    Vidal and Austen chose cemetery plots in Washington, D.C., between Jimmie Trimble and one of Vidal's literary heroes, Henry Adams. But age and illness did not bring Vidal closer to God. Wheelchair-bound in his 80s and saddened by the death of Austen and many peers and close friends, the author still looked to no existence beyond this one.

    "Because there is no cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit of dust at galaxy's edge," he once wrote, "all the more reason for us to maintain in proper balance what we have here. "Because there is nothing else. No thing. This is it. And quite enough, all in all."

    Vidal is survived by his half-sister Nina Straight and half brother Tommy Auchincloss.

    More Entertainment news:

  • Here's the story ... of a 'Brady Bunch' reboot

    Paramount Pictures / Getty Images file

    That's the way ... they became "The Brady Bunch" -- again.

    Here's the story ... of a "Brady Bunch" reboot. According to Deadline.com, CBS is working on a new version of the comedy about the famous blended Brady family, and actor Vince Vaughn is co-developing and executive producing the show.

    The new show will focus on a divorced and remarried Bobby Brady, who is dealing with kids from his first marriage, kids from his wife's first marriage, and a child the two have together, Deadline reports. The site also reports that the famous "Brady Bunch" theme song will likely be reworked if the show makes it to air.


    No word on casting yet. Mike Lookinland, 51, played Bobby in the original sitcom and in the 1990s drama "The Bradys," but he's worked more behind the camera in recent years.

    It's about time for the Bradys to make another comeback. The original show ran from 1969 to 1974, and spawned a cartoon, variety show, reunion movies and more. The family enjoyed a revival of interest in the 1990s with the "Bradys" hour-long drama, parody movies and a live theater show using actual scripts from the original episodes.

    Who would you like to see star in the reboot? Tell us on our Facebook page!

    More nostalgia:

    More TV news in The Clicker:

  • Killing Joke says frontman Jaz Coleman is missing

    Killing Joke frontman Jeremy “Jaz” Coleman has gone AWOL as the veteran British group preps for a brief tour with The Cult and The Mission.

    The influential industrial band posted on its Facebook page that the 52-year-old singer is “missing” after “maligning both The Cult and The Mission,” with which Killing Joke was to play several dates in England next month.

    Video from THR: Dave Grohl-directed documentary reveals first trailer

    “He is now AWOL and has not contacted any of his band mates,” the post reads. “We are deeply embarrassed by this and offer our sincere apologies to all involved. We are all concerned about our missing singer's welfare.”

    Killing Joke is booked to play five arena shows from Sept. 11-16 with original members Coleman, guitarist Kevin “Geordie” Walker, bassist Martin “Youth” Glover and drummer “Big” Paul Ferguson. The band’s latest album, "MMXII," was released in April.


    Coleman’s bandmates vowed to try to keep the tour intact but wrote, “If this proves not possible, Killing Joke will make alternative arrangements to compensate for the trouble caused.”

    Last week, the group posted a statement about questions surrounding the tour. “We'll make an official announcement clearing up any questions around the Cult tour very soon,” it reads. “Apologies for messing you guys around — you know that’s never our intention, and we appreciate the support you have all shown us over the years.”

    Video from THR: Looking back at Kurt Cobain's life, legacy at 45

    Killing Joke formed in London in the late 1970s as a postpunk quartet and evolved into a pioneer of industrial metal. It has released more than a dozen studio albums while remaining popular in the U.K. But only 1987’s "Pandemonium" dented the Billboard 200 stateside, peaking at No. 194. Coleman, who also plays keyboards, and Walker have been with the group throughout its three-decade-plus career.

    A number of prominent bands have cited the group as an influence, including Nirvana, Metallica, Jane’s Addiction, Rammstein and Korn.

    Watch the group's 1984 video for "Eighties," whose riff is eerily similar to Nirvana's 1992 hit "Come as You Are," below.

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Robin Roberts taking time off from 'GMA' ahead of marrow transplant

    Ray Tamarra / Getty Images

    Robin Roberts will be taking a longer break from "Good Morning America" than originally expected. She announced the news during the first hour of Tuesday's broadcast, noting that she wasn't feeling well.

    The host, recently diagnosed with blood and bone marrow disorder Myelodysplastic Syndrome, was not supposed to go on leave from the show until late August when she's scheduled to undergo a marrow transplant.

    Photos from THR: 35 most powerful people in media

    "Well, a full disclosure here, I’m not feeling too well," said Roberts. "In fact I’m going to leave and let you all do the rest of the program on your own. I’m going to take a little time off, just to get some vacay ... I’ll see you in a couple of weeks."

    Roberts then exaggerated that she was talking out the side of her mouth, which prompted anchor Josh Elliott to commend her on her Jimmy Cagney impersonation.

    The "week or two" rest later mentioned in the broadcast means that Roberts' current plans are to return before taking a longer recovery leave.


    Photos form THR: The most talked-about TV news faces

    For the rest of the week, Amy Robach will be reporting alongside Elliott and Lara Spencer, tomorrow through Friday, with Paula Faris joining as news anchor tomorrow and Thursday and Dan Harris pinch-hitting on Friday.

    Looking ahead to Roberts' longer break, ABC News has already announced that Barbara Walters, Diane Sawyer, Katie Couric and Kelly Ripa will be among the faces helping George Stephanopoulos navigate "GMA" without his co-host.

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Snoop Dogg drops the Dogg and roars into reggae as Snoop Lion

    Craig Barritt / Getty Images

    Snoop Lion, aka Snoop Dogg, at a news conference for "Reincarnated" at Miss Lilly's in New York on July 30.

    Snoop Dogg has a new trick. The rapper, going by the name Snoop Lion now, has unveiled details about his new reggae album and documentary film, "Reincarnated."

    At a New York news conference on Monday, Snoop said he underwent a spiritual and artistic rebirth while in Jamaica and was given his new name by Rastafarian priests, according to news.com.au.

    Entertainment Weekly reports that the hip-hop star teamed with Diplo of the dancehall crossover project Major Lazer to make the album. Take a listen to the first single, "La La La."

    According to news.com.au on Monday, Snoop said he always thought he was reggae legend Bob Marley reincarnated, and that rap is no longer "a challenge."

    Check out the trailer below for the Vice documentary on the making of "Reincarnated" and Snoop's smoke-filled odyssey in Jamaica.

    Do you think the rapper has what it takes to find reggae success? Tell us on Facebook.

    -- Written by Kurt Schlosser

    More music news:

  • Courtney Love lets Lana Del Rey know 'Heart-Shaped Box' is about her vagina

    AP, Getty Images file

    Courtney Love, left, and Lana Del Rey.

    Last week in Sydney, Australia, Lana Del Rey gave a delicate rendition of Nirvana's 1993 hit "Heart-Shaped Box," stripping the track of Kurt Cobain's grit in favor of a lighter version. Monday, Courtney Love reached out to Del Rey on Twitter to give her an unsolicited rock history lesson. Though the tweets have since been deleted, Stereogum took a few screenshots before their removal.

    "You do know the song is about my Vagina right? 'Throw down your umbilical noose so i can climb right back,' umm," wrote Love to Del Rey. "On top of which some of the lyrics about my vagina I contributed. So umm next time you sing it, think about my vagina will you?"

    Earlier this month, Love was hit with a lawsuit from a former assistant over "despicable conduct." It followed reports from last month revealing she had also been sued by her former lawyers over unpaid legal bills.

    More music news:

  • 'Skyfall' trailer has it all -- gadgets from Q, creepy villain, Bond girl, and plenty of danger

    Warning: Possible spoilers for "Skyfall" follow. If seeing James Bond jump out of a helicopter alongside the Queen of England during the Olympic opening ceremonies whetted your appetite for a little more 007, get ready to tuck in, because two nice juicy full trailers for "Skyfall" have just landed (one for domestic release, one for international).

    The action begins with M (Judi Dench) perusing Bond's obituary, as if for one minute the British spy could have been killed off. Sure enough, he's soon back in action, ready for another round of beautiful women, exotic destinations and danger.


    Bond gadget guy Q returns in this film, and he's gotten younger, as he's now played by Ben Whishaw. It's a big role to step into, but Whishaw nails it, with a slightly nerdy, still classy take on the gadgetmaster. One of the coolest things in the trailer is when he explains that Bond's Walther PPK has been coded to the spy's own palmprint, so no one else can fire it. Oh yeah, that's going to play in to the plot in a neat way.

    Javier Bardem gets yet another bad hairdo as villain Raoul Silva, and Bérénice Marlohe is a lovely Bond girl (is there any other kind?) with a chilling warning for Bond about Silva's powers. And we're looking forward to figuring out just how M managed to lose a hard drive full of secret agent details, and how she and M16 will deal with the consequences.

    "Skyfall" opens in the U.S. on Nov. 9. And as TODAY's Matt Lauer told viewers Monday, the spy franchise turns 50 this year. Daniel Craig, the current Bond, notes in the clip that he's happy to maintain the character, and hopes that plenty of other actors will play 007 after him and carry on the tradition. Take your time, Mr. Craig -- we're not so eager for you to hang up your tuxedo jacket.

    Will you see "Skyfall"? Who's your favorite James Bond actor? Tell us on Facebook. 

    More from movies:

  • Where's my tetherball gold medal? Childhood sports that should make the Olympics

    The London Olympics are showing how years upon years of disciplined practice by serious athletes can result in incredible performances, worldwide acclaim, and a possible gold medal.

    Catherine Ledner / Getty Images stock

    Tetherball has rules? Who knew?

    The rest of us, sitting at home watching from our couches? We may not have that fame and fortune, or memories of getting up at 4 a.m. to walk a balance beam with a crabby Romanian coach, but often we can look back on our own memories of sports or games that we played as kids.

    So as a tribute to all the non-Olympians out there, who deserve their own gold medals in card playing, kickball or jump rope, here are some of our memories. Could you have medaled in any of these sports?

    Kickball
    Boston had its Green Monster, but during the summer of 1976, we kids of North Owasso Boulevard in Shoreview, Minn. had an equally threatening outfield: Lake Wabasso. Every night that summer of America’s Bicentennial we played kickball in my cousins’ yard. If you could only manage to thump the red dimpled ball past the outfielders, you were pretty much golden. It was going to roll into the cattails and marshy lake edge and your outfielder was going to have to wade into and pick their way through the shallows to retrieve the ball, all the while you zoomed around the bases like our Olympic hero of that summer, Bruce Jenner. Kickball was democratic –- we girls had as good a shot as our big brothers and neighbors to nail a solid kick or catch a popped-up ball — and it was simple, everyone knew the rules.  In those pre-Internet distraction days, I sank into the game, never even looking up until the sun went down or my dad showed up to walk me back across the busy street to our house. By the next summer, we had moved, and my kickball days were over. But only last month, on a walk by my Seattle home, I stumbled upon an adult kickball league that eagerly announced they’re looking for more players. But there’s no lake in their outfield, so my strategy would have to change dramatically.    –Gael Fashingbauer Cooper


    Tetherball
    I must have been about 7 years old when I first realized that tetherball might just be the perfect summer activity. For a not-so-athletically inclined kid who wasn’t about to play kickball in the unrelenting Florida heat or climb up on branding-iron-hot monkey bars, this simple ball-tied-to-a-pole game -- ideally situated beneath a shady, live oak canopy -- held plenty of appeal. The rules were simple enough: While holding an ice-cold drink in one hand, slap the ball toward your opponent. If you’re lucky, the orb will either bean the other player, or it’ll sail right past and swoop around the pole. If you’re not so lucky, your opponent will land one of those sweet shots instead. Also, you should both shout something ridiculous at each other with every turn. (My pal and I favored the classic “Looney Tunes” battle cries of “Duck season!” vs. “Rabbit season!” for no particular reason.) I’ve since learned those aren’t the real rules for tetherball, but they’re the ones I still follow today. But take heed! One epic face off in the ‘90s left my BFF with a torn rotator cuff. Fortunately, my own injuries were limited to the tetherball standards: a beet-red hand, a sore throat and a spilled drink.     --Ree Hines

    Getty Images stock

    Bodysurfing can be a blast for the surfers, but nerve-wracking for the surfers' parents.

    Bodysurfing
    While most of my time was otherwise devoted to such highbrow pursuits as comic-book-collecting, Advanced Dungeons & Dragons and the finer points of the KISS discography, my summers in the late 1970s as a tween were largely ruled by one mighty force: the ocean. Flanked by a gaggle of friends out in Quogue, Long Island from early June to late August, I spent hours goofing around in the sprawling surf of the Atlantic Ocean, getting mercilessly tumbled and forever hoping for that perfect wave that would give me the ride of my short, frivolous life. Regardless of red flags, low temperatures, jellyfish, the threat of rip currents or even the ominous strains of the theme from “Jaws,” we’d happily go charging into the water every day, the rougher the surf the better. Even after a few terrifying waves gave me a couple of vigorous saltwater beat-downs, it seemed I’d never learn my lesson.  Now, decades later, I stand on the very same shoreline and watch as my own children giddily start to explore the timeless joys of the ocean, quietly dreading the day they’ll discover their own love for the cresting wave and hoping they’ll be more responsible than their old man.     --Alex Smith

    Card playing
    As the 1980 reigning Spit Champeen of Bar-T-Ranch camp in Gaithersburg, Md., I want to trumpet the endless summer pleasures of … card-playing. Sure, camp was great: We had horseback riding, swimming twice a day, Grape Nehi in bottles, Nuke-Em volleyball, Go-Karts. But between waiting for activities to begin and just general lazy free time, we dealt in cards. Crazy 8s, Slap Jack, War, Go Fish (if extremely bored), Pig, and the one game I simply could not be beat at: Spit. (Others of you may know it as Speed, but let’s face it – kids prefer something gross-sounding.) It’s a fast-moving game, a round always drawing a crowd. And as an uncoordinated 10-year-old, I relished the idea of being No. 1 at something. Except: I wasn’t, not always – my friend Beth Burns and I would face off regularly at Spit, and almost like clockwork, trade off the winner’s spot. So it also taught me to share, because Beth was awesome. Just like Spit. Lay your cards down now!     --Randee Dawn

    Marty Wolk

    Marty Wolk and brothers, including Scott Wolk, shown, took Wiffle ball very seriously in the 1970s.

    Wiffle ball
    Our suburban Cleveland backyard was home to hundreds of Wiffle ball games in the 1970s. The rules were detailed and arcane, and arguments over close plays could be heard clearly three houses away. Everyone had to turn around to hit lefthanded, supposedly as a handicap, since the park favored right-handed hitters. But the genius of the game was one simple rule: Hit it into the hedges, you're out. Over the hedges, and it's a home run. In high summer, the bushy hedges soared over 10 feet high and the giant maple trees drooped down, heavy with leaves, leaving only a small gap to shoot for in center field. But the thrill of lining one out on a warm summer afternoon, driving in three invisible runners to beat your brother -- that is a summer memory that is hard to top.    --Martin Wolk

    Bike riding
    When I was a kid, summers were a time of unimaginable freedom. No school. No TV limits. No organized activities. Under the clear blue California sky, with nothing to limit me but my own imagination, I was free to roam the neighborhood on my pink Huffy bike. I filled my days riding to friends’ homes, to the park, and when I was a little older, to the local 7-Eleven or Thrifty Drug Store for ice cream. I perfected tricks such as “no hands” riding and jumping off curbs. I would ride out past the abandoned golf course and down the unfinished street with the S-shaped sidewalk. The world was mine to explore. Eventually I would return home for dinner, but afterwards I would head out again into the late summer evening, with a promise to be home before the streetlights came on.   --Joy Jernigan

    Which decidedly non-Olympic sport could you medal in? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

  • Filmmaker Lana Wachowski makes rare promo for new film 'Cloud Atlas'

    Filmmaker Lana Wachowski made a rare on-camera appearance with brother Andy and director Tom Tykwer to promote their upcoming movie "Cloud Atlas."

    STORY: "Matrix" star Hugo Weaving reveals key details about the Wachowskis' top secret "Cloud Atlas"


    Lana, who first announced her transition from Larry nearly a decade ago, directed and wrote the movie with Tykwer and Andy based on David Mitchell's acclaimed novel.

    Lana, 47, appears in pink dreadlocks and a grey dress to talk up the film in a video released by Warner Bros. that was posted on the movie's iTunes Movies Trailer page Thursday alongside the "Cloud Atlas" trailer.

    "Cloud Atlas" weaves together six disparate story threads, which run from a South Pacific sea voyage during the 19th century to America in the 1970s to a post-apocalyptic wasteland.

    VIDEO: Tom Hanks' "Cloud Atlas" trailer lands online

    The movie, whose cast is featured in multiple roles, stars Tom Hanks, Hugh Grant, Halle Berry, Sandra Bullock and Susan Sarandon. It's set for an Oct. 26 release.

    The Wachowskis are behind such movies as the "Matrix" trilogy, "V for Vendetta" and "Speed Racer." Tykwer's credits include "Run Lola Run."

    Also in Entertainment:

  • Paul McCartney made how much for his Olympics Opening Ceremony show?

    Cameron Spencer / Getty Images

    Paul McCartney at the Opening Ceremony of the London 2012 Olympic Games.

    Being the famed musician Paul McCartney is, the Olympics must have had to shell out the big bucks to get him to perform for the opening ceremony, right?

    You might be surprised at what the Beatle's paycheck came out to be. If you're thinking in the millions, you're going to have to bring that figure way down.

    Swimmer Missy Franklin wins first Olympic gold medal

    McCartney was paid -- wait for it -- only one pound, or $1.57, for his performance at the Olympics opening ceremony, according to The Huffington Post, but even that wasn't anticipated.

    Take a look at pictures from Danny Boyle's "Isles of Wonder"


    All performers were aware that their services would be donated to the event, but the fee was a way to make the Olympics contract binding.

    That's kinda awesome, don't ya think?

    Related content:

     

  • Toby Keith has gallbladder surgery, cancels concert

    Harrison Mcclary / REUTERS

    Toby Keith.

    Toby Keith should be as good as he once was in no time. But first, the country-music superstar was forced to cancel Thursday's show in Sparta, Wis., while he recovers from surgery to have his gallbladder removed.

    His prognosis is apparently excellent, because he'll pick right back up on Friday at the WE Fest in Detroit Lakes, Minn., according to a message on his website.

    Pink, another star with no gallbladder anymore

    As for presumably disappointed ticketholders hoping to catch Keith's Live in Overdrive tour this week at Fort McCoy in Sparta, that show has been rescheduled for Aug. 30.

    Gretchen Wilson, who was previously scheduled, and other special guests will be performing in Keith's absence Thursday.

    GALLERY: Hottest Country Music Stars of 2012

    A rep for Keith says he's doing fine following today's outpatient procedure -- which he underwent less than 24 hours after rocking the audience at Darien Lake Performing Arts Center in western New York.


    Related content:

    Also in Entertainment:

  • 'Hobbit' movie adaptation to be a trilogy

    Peter Jackson's film adaptation of "The Hobbit" will be split into three movies, the director and the studios behind the venture said on Monday.

    Jackson said that given the richness of the story -- which is set 60 years before "The Lord of The Rings" -- he decided after wrapping up shooting recently in New Zealand that what was originally planned as two movies would now be a trilogy.

    "I'm delighted that New Line, MGM and Warner Bros. are equally enthusiastic about bringing fans this expansive tale across three films," Jackson said in a statement.

    "It has been an unexpected journey indeed, and in the words of Professor Tolkien himself, 'a tale that grew in the telling'," Jackson said in a statement on his Facebook site.


    "The Hobbit," written by J.R.R. Tolkien, is the prequel to the British author's epic fantasy "The Lord of the Rings," which Jackson made into three Oscar-winning films about 10 years ago.

    A spokesman for New Line said the third "Hobbit" film would be released in the summer of 2014. The first two "Hobbit" movies, starring British actor Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins, have already been announced for release in December 2012 and December 2013.

    "It is only at the end of a shoot that you finally get the chance to sit down and have a look at the film you have made," Jackson said on his Facebook page.

    "We know how much of the story of Bilbo Baggins, the Wizard Gandalf, the Dwarves of Erebor, the rise of the Necromancer, and the Battle of Dol Guldur will remain untold if we do not take this chance," he added.

    Will you see "The Hobbit"? Do you think the story needs three separate films? Tell us on Facebook.

    More from movies:

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • Katey Sagal and Sharon Stone set to 'Roast' Roseanne

    Gus Ruelas / Reuters

    Katey Sagal will be one of the celebrities roasting Roseanne Barr.

    Oooh, it's going to get hot at the "Comedy Central Roast of Roseanne"! The network on Monday announced several of the celebs who will be taking jabs at the comedian. 

    Among the stars set to give Roseanne Barr a taste of her own medicine are "Sons of Anarchy" star Katey Sagal, Sharon Stone, Carrie Fisher (aka Princess Leia) and "Robot Chicken's" Seth Green. Comedians Jeff Ross, Anthony Jeselnik and Amy Schumer will also be participating. No word yet if comedy's queen of mean Lisa Lampanelli will take on Roseanne.

    "Glee's" Jane Lynch was earlier announced as the Roast Master. "I've long fantasized of ripping Roseanne Barr a new one," the actress said in a statement.


    The "Roast" is set to tape Aug. 4, and will air Aug. 12 at 10 p.m. on Comedy Central.

    Which other celebrities and comedians would you like to see take part in ripping Roseanne? Share your picks on our Facebook page!

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Happy 65th birthday, Arnold Schwarzenegger! Now get to dah choppah

    Carolco Pictures Inc. / Zuma Press file

    Happy 65th birthday, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    Arnold Schwarzenegger turns 65 today. The Austrian-born bodybuilder, actor and former California governor has packed a lot of living into those six and a half decades.


    The revelation in 2011 that he had fathered a child with a housekeeper and was separating from his wife, Maria Shriver, may have changed some fans' opinions of the actor, but he's still an A-list name. And once he left the governor's office, he was free to return to movies, where he is responsible for some pretty memorable lines.

    Here are a few of our favorites to honor the big guy's birthday.

    1. "I'll be back." --"The Terminator

    2.  "It's not a tumor!"  --"Kindergarten Cop"

    3. "Hasta la vista, baby."  --"Terminator 2."

    4. "Get to the chopper!"  --"Predator"

    5. "To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women."  --"Conan the Barbarian"

    6. "You should not drink and bake."  --"Raw Deal"

    7. "Consider that a divorce."  --"Total Recall"

    8. "If it bleeds, we can kill it."  --"Predator"

    9. "The Iceman cometh!"  --"Batman and Robin"

    10. "Come with me if you want to live."  --"The Terminator"

     

    Tell us your top Schwarzenegger line on Facebook.

     

    Related content:

  • Heeeeeeeere's Johnny, with a prequel to 'The Shining'?

    Warner Bros.

    Jack Nicholson starred in "The Shining," which could receive a movie prequel.

    "The Shining" is considered by many to be one of the most terrifying movies (and books) of modern time. But do fans want to know what went on at Colorado's spooky Overlook Hotel before Jack Torrance and family arrived?

    Warner Bros., which made the 1980 film, is considering making a prequel to "The Shining," the Los Angeles Times is reporting.

    The studio has producers working on a possible new take, but hasn't formally committed to the project, the newspaper reported. One of those producers, Laeta Kalogridis, wrote the script for the Leonardo DiCaprio film "Shutter Island," based on Dennis Lehane's 2003 novel.

    Stephen King certainly gave Kalogridis and crew enough to work with in his 1977 novel. As fans of the movie and book know, Jack Torrance (played memorably by Jack Nicholson) comes to serve as caretaker at the Overlook after a previous caretaker murdered his family and committed suicide, and the hotel is full of ghosts of previous visitors.


    The Times points out that King has been working on "Doctor Sleep," a sequel to "The Shining," featuring a grown-up Danny Torrance. Early reports were that the book will be published in 2013.

    But some fans want "The Shining" to be left alone. "Is there a worse idea than this?" writes Scott D'Agostino on Twitter.

    "Let me check. Nope," responds Jordan Raup, editor-in-chief of The Film Stage.

    Is a "Shining" prequel a good or bad idea? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

     

  • Aquaman voice, character actor Norman Alden dies at 87

    Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images

    Norman Alden, shown here in the 1965 film "Andy."

    Norman Alden, a character actor who piled up a prodigious number of credits during his five decades in film and television, died July 27 of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Los Angeles, his family reported. He was 87.

    Alden appeared in several hundred television episodes, commercials and films (his family put the number at 2,500) but rarely had a regular gig, frequently playing tough guys and authority figures one show and one character at a time. Perhaps his most recognizable role was as Lou the mechanic in a series of AC Delco commercials.

    PHOTOS: Hollywood's Notable deaths of 2012

    Alden provided the voice of Aquaman in two "Super Friends" animated series in the 1970s, played outlaw Johnny Ringo in 1961 in "The Life and Legend" of Wyatt Earp opposite Hugh O'Brian and was Coach Leroy Fedders on seven episodes of "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" in the mid-1970s. His character drowned face-first in a bowl of Mary's (Louise Lasser's) chicken soup.

    The native of Fort Worth, Texas, got his start on "The Bob Cummings Show" in 1957 and would appear in scores of TV series like "Honey West," "Electra Woman and Dyna Girl," "Fay," "My Three Sons," "My Favorite Martian," "The Big Valley," "The Streets of San Francisco," "The Rookies," "Adam-12," "Combat!," "Charlie's Angels," "JAG" and "Batman," where he played one of the Joker's henchmen.

    On film, Alden voiced Sir Kay in Disney's "The Sword in the Stone" (1963), was roller derby skater "Horrible" Hank Hopkins in Raquel Welch's "Kansas City Bomber" (1972) and had roles in "Tora! Tora! Tora!" (1970), "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" (1977), "Semi-Tough" (1977), "Back to the Future" (1985), "They Live" (1988), "Ed Wood"(1994), "Patch Adams" (1998) and "K-Pax" (2001).

    VIDEO: "Back to the Future": Eric Stoltz as the original Marty McFly

    Following a tour of duty in Europe during World War II, Alden attended Texas Christian University and worked at KXOL Radio as a disc jockey. He left Fort Worth in his early twenties to go to New York, won Arthur Godfrey Talent Scouts and moved to Los Angeles.

    Survivors include his children Brent and Ashley, his grandson Zooey and his longtime life partner, Linda Thieben.

    A celebration of his life will be held in Los Angeles in August and in Fort Worth in September. The family asks that in a donation in Alden's name be made to TCU's drama department; to the department of cardiology at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles; or to the Frostig Center in Pasadena.

    Related content:

  • IMDb: Anti-Donald Trump doc is greatest British movie ever

    Montrose Pictures

    "You've Been Trumped" poster.

    Here's more proof that everything Donald Trump does is the biggest and the best: A new documentary about Trump's construction of a golf course is Scotland has only been out in the U.K. for two weeks, but in that time it has become the highest-rated British film of all time on IMDb.

    That's right: according to the website's users, "You've Been Trumped" is better than "Lawrence of Arabia," better than "The Bridge on the River Kwai," better than "The King's Speech," better than any other British production ever.

    (One caveat: British-born directors Alfred Hitchcock and Christopher Nolan each placed a pair of films higher on the list - but in all four cases, those films were funded, set and shot in the U.S.)

    "You've Been Trumped," shot in Scotland and made by Scottish director Anthony Baxter, has a current user rating of 8.5 among what IMDb called "regular users," whose rankings determine the site's charts. That ties the film with "Citizen Kane," "Dr. Strangelove," "Taxi Driver," "North by Northwest," "City Lights" and "American Beauty" (the last three American productions from British-born directors) as the 35th greatest movie of all time.

    On the separate documentary chart, it ranks third, just behind the Alain Resnais' 1955 landmark "Night and Fog" and, in an indication of how early enthusiasm can skew the charts, the recent doc about the 1992 Lithuanian Olympic basketball team, "The Other Dream Team."

    The Donald would no doubt appreciate and even expect the superlatives, if not for the fact that "You've Been Trumped" is a virulently anti-Trump movie. A chronicle of how Trump purchased hundreds of acres to build a golf course on the northeast coast of Scotland, near the location of the 1983 film "Local Hero," it details land grabs, local protests and roughshod environmental practices undertaken with the cooperation of Scottish officials.

    Trump, meanwhile, insists that the construction will be "environmentally perfect," while dismissing an angry local with lines like, "He lives like a pig."


    "The Trump who appears in Baxter's film is a bully and a blowhard," wrote Sports Illustrated's Michael Bamberger, who liked the movie but thinks the man is slightly more nuanced than that.

    The film has won awards at several international film festivals, notwithstanding the fact that Trump himself has reportedly called it "boring."

    "You've Been Trumped" will be released in Los Angeles - where Trump fought a few more battles building a golf course in Palos Verdes - on Aug. 17.

    Critics, by the way, have been only marginally less enthusiastic than IMDb users. The film stands at 92 percent positive on Rotten Tomatoes, which places it above "The Dark Knight Rises" and "Beasts of the Southern Wild" but below "Moonrise Kingdom" and "The Invisible War." 

    Related content:

  • Madonna rep says short Paris show meant to 'honor' French

    Guy Oseary / AP

    Madonna performs in Paris.

    Madonna has finally shed a ray of light on controversy surrounding her recent concert in Paris that saw outraged fans screaming “refund” last Thursday. 

    Right-wing French politician tells Madonna to pay $1 million over controversial video

    The live concert at Paris’ Olympia concert venue, scheduled as an unexpected extra stop on the singer’s "MDNA" tour, lasted for just 45 minutes, much to the dismay of fans camped outside for hours and days before the show and the thousands of people watching the concert live on YouTube. However, according to Madonna’s spokeswoman Liz Rosenberg, the Material Girl’s last-minute concert wasn’t meant to be a full show, but rather one of a handful of “club dates” that, in the past, “were never more than 45 minutes.”

    PHOTOS: Madonna: Iconic career and life in pictures

    Rosenberg said that, rather than being a snub to French audiences, the show “was her way to honor her love for French artists, French cinema and a tribute to France’s long history of welcoming and inspiring artists, authors, painters, poets and minorities from other countries over the years.”

    According to Rosenberg, the show cost the pop star almost $1 million to produce and involved a “tremendous effort” on the part of organizers to keep ticket prices at a “reasonable” range. “The show was not billed as her full 'MDNA' concert,” Rosenberg said.


    VIDEO: Madonna projects swastika on French politician Marine Le Pen's face during concert

    Despite the cries of “refund!” and boos from the crowd when Madonna left the stage at the end of the show, the concert was actually meant as a peace offering to France after the singer angered right wing party leader Marine Le Pen by showing a video of her face with a swastika juxtaposed on it at a July 14 show in the French capital, though the singer's longtime rep did not directly address a recent report that a near-riot was sparked by Le Pen supporters. The show was “planned as a heartfelt thank you to France,” Rosenberg explained, adding: “And by the way, she put on a fabulous show which was streamed for millions of fans around the world.”

    Related content:

  • Stabbing ends Las Vegas concert by Jack Black's Tenacious D

    Mario Anzuoni / REUTERS

    Kyle Gass and Jack Black are Tenacious D.

    A fight broke out in the crowd during a show by Tenacious D in Las Vegas Saturday night and one person was stabbed, the Las Vegas Journal-Review reports.

    Jack Black: Nirvana was the last great rock band

    Rock-comedy partners Jack Black and Kyle Gass were about halfway through their set at the 1,500-capacity House of Blues venue in the Mandalay Bay resort when a scuffle erupted between two men in the audience. One person was stabbed in the leg, and eyewitnesses told the Journal-Review that a large pool of blood was left in the bar area near the stage.

    Three stabbed during Swedish House Mafia show


    The police canceled the rest of the concert and shut down the House of Blues for the night. According to KLAS-TV Las Vegas, the victim was taken to the hospital and a suspect is in police custody. 

    More in Entertainment:

  • Chewbacca headpiece sells for $172K at 'Star Wars' prop auction

    Frederic J. Brown / AFP - Getty Images

    Laugh it up, fuzzball: The Chewbacca head from "Star Wars" sold quite well at auction.

    A Chewbacca headpiece used in the original "Star Wars" trilogy sold for $172,200 ($140,000 plus $32,200 buyer's premium) at a Profiles in History auction.

    Comic-Con 2012: Hasbro premieres "Star Wars," Marvel and G.I. Joe Exclusives

    Profiles described it as a the finest "screen correct" Chewbacca headpiece in private hands. It comprises a screen-used full-head cowl finished with period-made facial pieces, such as the front jaw, nose, teeth and tongue.

    The item also included signed photographs from Peter Mayhew, who played Chewbacca, and Stuart Freeborn, who designed the costume.

    Other Star Wars items realizing high prices included a screen-used blaster rifle from the first Star Wars movie, which sold for $104,550 ($85,000 plus buyer's premium of $19,550).

    It is the first blaster ever offered for public sale that appeared on film. This particular model is one of two made with a Bakelite stock like the one used in the scene in which Chewbacca helps break Princess Leia out of jail (though it is unknown if this is the one used by the Wookie).

    Some collector also snapped up the original concept art for the famous poster used in the first "Star Wars" movie for $73,800 ($60,000 plus $13,800 for the buyer's premium).


    The poster was drawn by Tom Jung, who worked for the advertising agency Smolen, Smith and Connolly and was already well known for his work on the "Dr. Zhivago" poster.

    Jung called the famous image of the cross formed by Skywalker's sword in front of a ghosted image a good illustration of the movie's good versus evil theme.

    Related content:

     

  • Punk rockers Pussy Riot go on trial for anti-Putin church protest

    Maxim Shemetov / Reuters

    Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a member of female punk band Pussy Riot, is escorted by police as she arrives at a Moscow court on Monday.

    Updated at 9:20 a.m. ET: MOSCOW - Three women who protested against Vladimir Putin in a "punk prayer" on the altar of Russia's main cathedral went on trial Monday in a case seen as a test of the longtime leader's treatment of dissent during a new presidential term.

    The members of the band Pussy Riot face up to seven years in prison for an unsanctioned performance in February in which they entered Moscow's Christ the Savior Cathedral, ascended the altar and called on the Virgin Mary to "throw Putin out!"


    Maria Alyokhina, 24, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, 22, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, 29, were brought to Moscow's Khamovniki court for Russia's highest-profile trial since former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky was convicted in 2010.

    Governments and rights groups, as well as musicians such as Sting, the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Franz Ferdinand, have expressed concern about the trial, reflecting doubts that Putin - who is serving his third presidential term and could be in power until 2024 - will become more tolerant of dissenting voices.

    On Monday, supporters chanted "Girls, we're with you!" and "Victory!" as the women, each handcuffed by the wrist to a female officer, were led from a white and blue police van into the courthouse through a side entrance. Streets around the court, on a high Moscow River embankment, were closed.

    More Russia coverage from NBCNews.com

    They were led into a metal and clear-plastic courtroom cage, where they milled and spoke with lawyers as preparations began. Tolokonnikova, in a blue checkered shirt, lowered her head to speak through a small opening in the enclosure. Two pairs of handcuffs hung at the ready just beside her face.

    Three female punk rockers are put on trial in Russia after taking over the pulpit at an Orthodox cathedral and performing a controversial song criticizing President Putin. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "We did not want to offend anybody," Tolokonnikova said, speaking to a defense lawyer who stood outside the enclosure. "We admit our political guilt, but not legal guilt."

    The band's stunt was designed to highlight the close relationship between the dominant Russian Orthodox Church and former KGB officer Putin, then prime minister, whose campaign to return to the presidency in a March election was backed clearly, if informally, by the leader of the church, Patriarch Kirill.

    'Serious problems' with vote that kept Putin in power, monitors say

    Symbolically, the trial is taking place in the same Moscow courthouse where Khodorkovsky was found guilty of stealing his own oil in a trial in 2010 that many Western politicians said looked like a crude Kremlin attempt to keep a man it saw as a political threat behind bars.

    'Our motives are exclusively political'
    The women are charged with hooliganism motivated by religious hatred or hostility.

    But in opening statements read by a defense lawyer, who sometimes struggled with the handwritten texts, they said they were protesting against Kirill's political support for Putin and had no animosity toward the church or the faithful.

    "I have never had such feelings toward anyone in the world," Tolokonnikova said in her statement. "We are not enemies of Christians ... our motives are exclusively political."

    "We only want Russia to change for the better," she said.

    Alyokhina's statement said: "I thought the church loved all its children, but it seems the church loves only those children who love Putin."

    Maxim Shemetov / Reuters

    Maria Alyokhina, a member of Pussy Riot, arrives at a Moscow court on Monday.

    The women looked thinner and paler than they did when they were jailed following the performance in late February, shortly before Putin, in power as president from 2000-2008 and then as prime minister, won a six-year presidential term on March 4.

    "She looks like she has been on a long hunger strike," Stanislav Samutsevich said of his daughter. "Her cheeks are hollow … I've never seen her in such a state. I think this is like an inquisition, like mockery."

    A reporter on state-run Rossiya-24 television presented a different picture, focusing on occasional smiles and chuckles and an overall air of self-assuredness among the women, who whispered to each other as a prosecutor read the charges.

    PhotoBlog: Topless feminist confronts Russian church patriarch

    "Look at their faces; they are laughing and joking," the reporter said on the news, adding that a viewer might think they were "continuing the action" they carried out at the cathedral.

    Prosecutors asked for the trial, which was streamed live on the Internet, to be closed to the public and the media, saying a "rift in society" and emotions over the case put the defendants and other participants at risk.

    Envelope-pushing performances
    Pussy Riot, who say they were inspired by bands such as Bikini Kill from the 1990s-era Riot Grrrl U.S. feminist punk movement, burst onto the scene this winter with angry lyrics and envelope-pushing performances, including one on Red Square, that went viral on the Internet.

    The collective see themselves as part of a disenchanted generation that is looking for creative ways to show its dissatisfaction with Putin's dominance of the political landscape.

    The all-girl group has no lead singer, and, in order that anyone may join, its members don multi-colored balaclavas, which have become its trademark. They numbered five when they formed in November but later expanded to 10 members, though there have been no performances in Russia since their bandmates' arrest.

    Among the group's most noted outrageous acts was the drawing of an enormous phallus on a drawbridge in St. Petersburg. Several members participated in an obscene "fertility rite" at Moscow museum, mocking Dmitry Medvedev, who was elected Russian president the next day.

    From March 2012: Anti-Putin activists pay high price, but refuse to back down

    'Russian superhero' needed?
    One member of the group, who spoke to Britain's The Observer newspaper, said members of the band masked their faces to appear anonymous in public to show that "everybody can be Pussy Riot." The 25-year-old, who spoke via video while in hiding for fear of arrest, went by the nickname "Sparrow."

    She said a "Russian superhero" was needed at the moment. Wearing masks and costumes during performances, "Sparrow" told The Observer, felt like "having a second life. It's like being Spider-Man or Catwoman. ... When I'm in a mask I feel a little bit like a superhero. I feel more power. I feel really brave. I believe that I can do everything and can change the situation."

    Russian Orthodox Church apologizes for Photoshopping patriarch's watch

    She also told the newspaper: "It's a bit scary but we're sure what we are doing is right. … When you're doing the right thing you're not scared. Because it's horrible what's happened to the girls."

    Anthony Kiedis and Flea of the Red Hot Chili Peppers spoke out in support of the group during the Calif. funk-rock band's July 22 concert in Moscow. Kiedis wore a Pussy Riot t-shirt on stage and both musicians gave letters to Pyotr Verzilov, Tolokonnikova's husband, according to The Guardian newspaper.

    Church revival
    The unsanctioned performance that prompted the arrest of three Pussy Riot members offended many believers in predominantly Orthodox Christian Russia, where the church has enjoyed a huge revival since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    More Europe coverage from NBCNews.com

    But while some two-thirds of the country's 142 million people are considered Russian Orthodox, the number of practicing churchgoers is far smaller in a nation where the legacy of decades of official atheism looms large.

    Patriarch Kirill has said the church was "under attack by persecutors" and has encouraged pro-church demonstrations including a procession to Christ the Savior in April.

    "This is only the small, visible tip of an iceberg of extremists," Mikhail Kuznetsov, a lawyer representing church security guards, said in an interview with the newspaper Moscow News last week. "They are aiming to destroy the thousand-year-old traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church, to provoke a schism, and to deceivingly bring the flock not towards God, but towards Satan."

    A topless woman protests at the arrival of the Russian Orthodox Church leader in Ukraine. NBCNews.com's Alex Witt reports.

    'Harmless civil activity'
    The defendants' supporters say the charges are politically-motivated.

    In a poll by the independent Levada Center and released by the prominent newspaper Kommersant earlier this month, 50 percent of Muscovites said they did not support a criminal trial for the members of Pussy Riot, with 36 percent supporting the trial.

    Pussy Riot's cathedral performance was part of a lively protest movement that at its peak saw 100,000 people turn out for rallies in Moscow, some of the largest in Russia since the demise of the USSR.

    Reuters, The Associated Press and NBC News staff contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    News on NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • From Olympic glory to reality TV gold: Athletes steal the show

    Getty Images (3)

    Kristi Yamaguchi, Johnny Weir and Bruce Jenner all went from the Olympics to reality TV.

    They spent countless hours training, made it through tough qualifying trials, and competed in the ultimate competition. They are, in short, the very best of the best. They’re ... reality TV stars?!

    Well, they didn’t start out that way, but more than a few memorable Olympians traded their medal-worthy accomplishments for small-screen fun once the games were over.

    As the 2012 Olympic hopefuls go for the glory in London and move on to their own reality TV efforts, let’s take a look at some of the athletes who’ve already paved the primetime way and the shows that gave them a shot.

    'Dancing With the Stars'
    No reality show can boast as big a list of Olympic participants as the ballroom bash. Gold, silver and bronze medalists, "DWTS" has had them all, and several have even moved on to mirror-ball trophy glory. Speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno was the season-four champ, figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi dominated season six and gymnast Shawn Johnson triumphed in season eight. (Both Apolo and Shawn will be competing in the "All Stars" edition this fall.) Other Olympians who have shown off their fancy (and sometimes not so fancy) footwork include Misty May-Treanor, Maurice Greene, Natalie Coughlin, Evan Lysacek, Sugar Ray Leonard and Hope Solo.

    'Keeping Up With the Kardashians'
    When thinking about Olympic athletes on reality TV, the "world's greatest athlete," Bruce Jenner, immediately springs to mind. The man not only won a gold medal for the U.S. at the 1976 Olympics in the decathlon, he also set a world record with his 8,634 points. Since 2007, Bruce -- married to Kardashian matriarch Kris -- has been featured on the E! network's popular reality show as well as its spin-offs. He's shown mostly playing dad, but from time to time, offers tales and words of wisdom from his days as an Olympian. But Bruce isn't the only person on the show and its spin-offs who's competed in the games. His son-in-law/basketball star Lamar Odom -- Khloe's husband -- played at the 2004 games and helped the team win bronze.

    'Biggest Loser'
    A lot of hard work goes into getting ready for an event like the Olympics -- then again, there is no other event like the Olympics. That’s why when the world’s premier athletes take the field, they’re usually in the finest physical form of their lives. After the games? Things can change. That’s a fact Rulon Gardner, the man who took the gold for the U.S. in Greco-Roman wrestling in 2000 and the bronze for the same event in 2004, knows well. In 2011, after weighing in at 442 pounds, he found himself in need of the sort of training that he could get on "The Biggest Loser" ranch. While there, he lost more than 140 pounds before distinguishing himself as the very first player to quit the competition. Another past Olympian starred on the show too. Former "Loser" trainer and retired pro tennis player Anna Kournikova competed in the 1996 games on the Russian tennis team.


    'Be Good, Johnny Weir'
    Sure, some Olympians sign on to appear in established reality shows when the competition wraps, but then there’s figure skater Johnny Weir, who followed up his 2010 Winter Olympics performances with his very own show. The Sundance Channel’s eight-part docuseries "Be Good, Johnny Weir" followed the life of the charismatic ice star. But that’s far from Weir’s only reality TV experience. In fact, he’s just as much of a workaholic on the small screen as he is in the rink. He gave comedian Kathy Griffin skating lessons on "My Life on The D-List," was as a regular pro panelist on ABC’s short-lived "Skating With the Stars," served as a guest judge on "RuPaul’s Drag Race," and appeared on "The Rachel Zoe Project" and "Say Yes to the Dress." Whew!

    'Celebrity Apprentice'
    Summer Sanders, who won several medals for swimming at the 1992 Summer Games, like Johnny, didn't limit herself to just one reality show. Since her Olympic days, the swimmer has participated in three reality programs. Of her stints competing on TV, she lasted the longest on season three of "Celebrity Apprentice." Going up against the likes of Bret Michaels, Sharon Osbourne and Rod Blagojevich, she ended up lasting eight weeks on the show and raised $45,000 for her charity. She also cooked on Team Rachael for Food Network's "Rachael vs. Guy: Celebrity Cook-Off," and was eliminated in episode four of six.  Summer also hosted Fox's "Skating With Celebrities" in 2006.

    Which of today's Olympic athletes would you like to see on reality TV tomorrow? And what kind of show should they be on? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page! 

    More in The Clicker:

  • 'Dark Knight' remains No. 1 at box office despite 60 percent dropoff

    It looks grim for Batman as he must face off with the terrifying villain Bane.

    Batman sequel "The Dark Knight Rises" topped movie box office charts this weekend with nearly $64.1 million in U.S. and Canadian ticket sales, a 60 percent drop from its debut last week in the wake of a fatal shooting in a Colorado movie theater.

    The reduction in ticket sales for the movie starring Christian Bale as the comic book crimefighter trailed the performance of its 2008 predecessor "The Dark Knight," which fell 53 percent in its second weekend to earn $75 million.

    The drop also proved weaker than this year's huge summer hit, "The Avengers," which opened to roughly $207 million in its first weekend and fell about 50 percent to $103 million.

    On July 20, a gunman burst into a movie theater at a midnight screening of "The Dark Knight Rises" in Aurora, Colo., and opened fire, killing 12 people and injuring 58. It has been difficult to pin down just exactly how the massacre impacted business for the movie, which cost the Warner Bros. studio around $250 million to make and tens of millions more to market.

    But overall, "Dark Knight Rises" played well through the week and now has amassed $289 million total U.S. and Canadian ticket sales, and other films with huge opening weekends have fallen off more than 60 percent in the past. The domestic box office for "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part II," for instance, fell 72 percent from $169 million its first weekend to $47 million in its second.

    Among other titles in theaters, animated children's film "Ice Age: Continental Drift," about animals on a global adventure, retained the No. 2 spot on box office charts by earning $13.3 million at domestic theaters.


    "The Watch," a new comedy in theaters this week, brought in $13 million to land in third place. The film stars Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn and Jonah Hill as men who start a neighborhood watch group and battle aliens.

    "The Dark Knight Rises" was released by Warner Bros., a unit of Time Warner Inc. News Corp's 20th Century Fox film studio distributed "Ice Age: Continental Drift" and "The Watch."

    Related content:

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • Exclusive 'Breaking Bad' photo: Jesse and Mike face off

    Last Sunday's episode of "Breaking Bad" saw Walt and Jesse start to rebuild their "business" by finally convincing Mike to join them in their endeavors, but could there be trouble already for the new partners?

    A photo that AMC is sharing exclusively with us of Sunday's episode, "Hazard Pay," appears to show a tense moment between the fixer and the young meth cook.

    Ursula Coyote / AMC

    Mike (Jonathan Banks) and Jesse (Aaron Paul) on "Breaking Bad."

    Mike, whose relationship with the pair has never been easy, has nevertheless acted a bit fatherly at times toward Jesse as Walt dives deeper into his dark side. Could this be a frustrating father-son teaching moment, or a disagreement over business? 


    Watch and see when the episode airs at 10 p.m. Sunday on AMC.

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Send 'The Watch' back into space

    The genre mishmash — “mashup” would be an overstatement — that cranks up "The Watch" might sound fresh: guy-centric goofiness meets sci-fi, with a dash of marital coming-of-age story. But the feature feels like part three of a past-its-prime franchise. That might be because topliners Ben Stiller and Vince Vaughn are playing the guys they always play, or because the script, credited to Jared Stern, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, moves lazily from setup to punchline to setup, with no particular point and almost no punch. 

    It’s not likely that a big-screen alien invasion has ever felt less urgent. But as the highest-profile comedy to hit theaters since last month’s "Ted," the Fox release is sure to pull in strong, if not stratospheric, numbers. 

    Originally called "Neighborhood Watch" and changed to the more generic title after the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, director Akiva Schaffer’s pic is set in the fictional Glenview, Ohio, played by Atlanta as a generic suburban fantasyland lined with oversize houses. Stiller’s Evan Troutwig manages the local Costco, which turns out to be HQ for the invaders — the idea of big-box one-stop shopping for planetary takeover one of the movie’s better jokes among the predictable shock-value guy talk.

    Video from THR: 'The Watch' outtakes trailer: Stiller, Hill, Vaughn and Ayoade goof off

    A civically inclined yet angry milquetoast, Evan spearheads a neighborhood watch after the brutal, mysterious murder of one of his employees, a night guard (Joseph A. Nuñez) who happens to be a newly minted American citizen but is, more crucially, Expendable Victim No. 1. The recruits are married party guy Bob (Vaughn), wannabe cop Franklin (Jonah Hill) and newly divorced Brit Jamarcus (Richard Ayoade). 

    The latter two lend the proceedings a bit of unpredictable character, although the maladjusted Franklin’s bedroom arsenal might give some viewers pause in light of recent horrific events. Vaughn adds a layer of paternal hysteria to his patented loudmouth, as Bob tries to rein in teen daughter Chelsea (Erin Moriarty) and quash her hotshot boyfriend (Nicholas Braun). 

    Schaffer, a vet "SNL" writer, tries to frame the quartet’s heroic misadventures with complicating friction: They’re continually tormented by a snarky cop (Will Forte), and Evan is trying to evade facts with his eager-to-procreate wife (the talented Rosemarie DeWitt, doing what she can with a paper-thin role). But mainly the film proceeds by gags, with at least as many misses as hits. The guys discover an alien weapon that shoots lethal lasers (cue montage of them blowing things up); the guys capture one of the skeletal aliens (cue montage of them posing for “funny” photos with said alien). The monster itself, a combination of live-action and digital effects, has the look of an oversize insect and oozes the requisite slime. 

    Video from THR: Fox changes 'Neighborhood Watch' to 'The Watch' after Florida shooting


    Its m.o. of skinning victims and donning human exteriors introduces a "Body Snatchers" element and the kernel of a good movie. Knowing that invaders are passing themselves off as members of the Middle American community naturally gives rise to paranoia — a good fit for the mistrust and disaffection that Stiller can be so good at conveying. But though he gets to run with mechanical fury like an "MI"-franchise Tom Cruise, the edgier aspects of Evan’s personality are downplayed, even in his run-ins with a creepily attentive new neighbor. An uncredited Billy Crudup plays up the neighbor’s weirdness, while Andy Samberg cameos in the disappointing payoff to this strand of the story. 

    With its polished but undistinguished design and visuals, "The Watch" wastes much of its running time on the expected bawdy shtick and man-cave musings. Tying it all up in unmemorable fashion are the usual lessons in being a grownup.

    More in NBCNews.com entertainment:

Jump to July 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 ... 12