Jump to April 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 4 ... 12
  • Obama's 'slow jam' proved not-so-funny to political pundits

    NBC

    President Obama may have gotten a little ‘too cool for school’ when he opted to slow jam the news with Jimmy Fallon on Tuesday.

    Appearing for the first time on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon,” at a taping on the University of North Carolina campus, the “Preezy of the United Steezy” had some fun with the talk show host, while also discussing his goals for reducing interest rates on student loans. It was his bluesy, R&B mock of the headlines, however, that had many political commentators calling foul, with both conservatives and liberals claiming his move was “undignified,” or, at the very least, unnecessary.

    “If Romney is this year’s Reagan, Obama is this year’s Clinton,” said “Daily Show” host Jon Stewart on his Wednesday report. “Mr. President, you’re the president. You don’t have to do this s*** anymore.”

    Fox News' Gretchen Carlson was more blunt. "I personally do not agree with the highest office of the land, the most important figure in the world going on these comedy shows. I think it lowers the status of the office."

    When asked by her co-host if she thought Obama’s idea was an effective way to appeal to young votes, Carlson replied, “I don't care…I think it's nutso."

    On Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, President Obama tried his hand at "slow jamming" the news. The GOP has fired back saying the bit was not presidential.

    And there was Rush Limbaugh, who felt the satire was more comparable to Richard Nixon’s appearance on “Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In” in 1968.

    “Remember that show? And everybody thought that it was a descent into no dignity whatsoever. So beneath the presidency, so beneath the office of the presidency,” Limbaugh said on his radio program Wednesday. “He's just trying to show that he's hip. But people under 30 live in the Obama economy, too, and Obama can't lower the voting age. Can't do that. He can't do away with the draft. He can't give them amnesty. None of that's relevant or going on now. So he has to resort to going on shows like Jimmy Fallon and promising to pay for everybody's college tuition.”

    As all have pointed out, nevertheless, Obama was aiming for the younger demographic when he went on the show, a group that supported him in 2008 and who could play a significant part in this year’s election.

    Furthermore, his opponent, Mitt Romney, has also done a stint for the variety circuit.

    On his Thursday edition of “The Colbert Report, host Stephen Colbert compared Obama’s comedic turn to Mitt Romney’s appearance on the “Late Show with David Letterman” in December.

    “Now if Obama must go on these shows, he should do it like Romney did on Letterman,” remarked Colbert then cutting to a clip from Letterman’s Top Ten list, where the Republican politician chirped, “What’s up gangta? It’s the M-I-double tizzle.”

    Commented Colbert, “That’s the kind of gravitas we want… Clearly, Mitt is down with the homies.”

    Did you think Obama's appearance on Fallon was funny and effective or inappropriate and unpresidential? Tell us what you think on Facebook.

    Related content:

  • DUN DUN: 'Community' plays 'Law & Order' for laughs, kills off fan favorite

    NBC

    The halls of Greendale Community College looked a lot like the NYPD homicide unit on Thursday night's episode of "Community." That's because the critically-acclaimed comedy delivered a spot-on sendup of crime classic "Law & Order."

    OK, maybe it wasn't entirely spot on -- after all, the case at hand involved a sabotaged school project rather than a murder -- but from the mock opening to the camera work to the sounds (DUN DUN!), it was all there.   

    There were "Community" equivalents to every "L&O" character. Troy and Abed represented the detectives ("who investigate the crimes"), while Annie and Jeff stood in for the district attorneys ("who prosecute the offenders"). The rest of Greendale's familiar faces filled out vital roles (Captain Shirley, suspects Todd and Star-Burns, Judge Kane), but for the role of the medical examiner (or yam examiner, in this case), they brought in a ringer: "Law & Order's" own Dr. Elizabeth Rodgers.

    The show even capped off with a perfect procedural-crime show twist. Just as the gang wrapped up the case of the smashed-yam project, an anonymous phone call delivered a completely "Law & Order"-worthy, out-of-nowhere blow. Spoiler alert: Fan-favorite background character Star-Burns died in a completely unrelated mobile meth lab accident.

    The show just won't be the same without his clueless comic relief

    What did you think of the lighthearted take on "Law & Order"? And what about that shocker at the end? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

     

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Photos of Marilyn Monroe, six weeks before her death, headed for auction

    Just when you thought perhaps you'd seen every image ever taken of Marilyn Monroe, a new set of rare prints has emerged, taken just six weeks before her death in 1962.

    Photographer Bert Stern's chromogenic prints, from a session called The Last Sitting, are set to go to auction in New York on May 8. Stern had three sessions with the Hollywood legend for Vogue magazine late in June 1962.

    BNPS

    Monroe is seen posing topless, holding what appears to be a cocktail, lounging on a bed and playing with a sheer scarf.

    A story on London's Daily Mail website says that because the prints have been displayed for many years, the color has "shifted" slightly. The site quotes Judith Eurich from the British auction house Bonhams, which is selling the prints: "This is a very popular set. It is unusual to find a whole set and the owner has had them since they were printed."

    BNPS

    The set of photographs is expected to fetch $25,000.

    TODAY.com previously reported on more Monroe photographs up for auction this spring, including images taken by the actress' longtime makeup artist Allan "Whitey" Snyder.

    Monroe died on Aug. 5, 1962, at age 36.

    Related content:

  • Paul McCartney, Brian Williams and Jon Hamm rock '30 Rock' live show

    For the second time in "30 Rock's" six-season run, the show took on the risks and reaped the rewards of a star-studded, live broadcast -- actually two live broadcasts, with a variety of different stars, all in one night.

    East Coast fans were treated to an opening and closing cameo from musical legend Paul McCartney, while on the other side of the country, viewers saw reality TV star Kim Kardashian fill that spot.

    One of the show's many highlights was a scene spoofing classic news team David Brinkley and Chet Huntley, played first by Jon Hamm and Alec Baldwin and later by Brian Williams and Baldwin.  See the clip above for a sample of both versions.

    Other must-see scenes? One hilariously over-the-top send-up of "The Honeymooners," a look at television's racially insensitive past, the latest from "Nazi doctor" Spaceman and a variety of surprise appearances from "Saturday Night Live" regular Fred Armisen.

     

    Want to see more of the show? Check out the East vs. West highlights or watch the full episodes on the "30 Rock" website.

    What was your favorite gag on Thursday night? Tell us on our Facebook page.

    Related content:

    More in the Clicker:

  • No Jessica Simpson baby yet? Let us shower you with this fancy video

    Amanda Schwab / AP file

    Jessica Simpson in New York back in November, way before talk of history's longest celebrity pregnancy set in.

    There hasn't been enough Jessica Simpson news lately. We're all waiting -- right? aren't we ALL waiting?! -- with bated breath for the news that she finally, after approximately 37 months of being pregnant, has popped out that baby girl.

    It hasn't happened yet.

    But the singer, who has been noticeably absent from the media lately, threw us a bone Thursday by uploading to her website a charming (professional) video from her March 18 baby shower. The Charlotte's Web-themed shower was meticulously planned by celebrity wedding planner Mindy Weiss, so Jess is smart to get as much mileage out of that party as possible.

    The short video flashes visions of hay bales, organic ice cream, giant lollipops, Jessica Alba, and mounds and mounds of gifts.

    She's probably still opening presents. That must be why we haven't seen her in a couple of weeks.

    In a nod to Simpson's southern roots -- or just her pregnancy cravings -- guests were offered fried Oreos and Twinkies.

    On her official website, Simpson writes that she hopes "I can be half as good of a mom as my mom has been to me."

    We're wondering if Baby Maxwell will join the family business by selling her first photos to a magazine, or will she pull a Blue Ivy and make her debut on mom's personal blog?

    And, given Jessica's penchant for oversharing, can we expect the next video to be from the labor and delivery room? 

    We should know in a few weeks.

    Have you been to a themed shower that you thought was particularly creative? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

    Pamela Sitt writes about celebrities and mommies and babies and more for TODAY.com.

  • IRS goes after Anna Nicole Smith's estate for back taxes owed

    Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

    Anna Nicole Smith, who died in 2007, owes nearly $300,000 in back taxes.

    It looks like tax troubles follow you even after death, unfortunately. Although Anna Nicole Smith passed away in 2007, the IRS is still after the former reality star for some hefty back taxes owed from previous years.

    But what can they really do?

    More from E: View the documents

    They take over your stuff, that's what.

    IRS filed a lien against Smith's estate this week in Los Angeles Superior Court for the $289,123.48 they are seeking in back taxes from the estate.

    This isn't the first time legal issues have stuck around after Smith's death.

    In June of last year, Larry Birkhead was faced with the results of the battle between the estate of the late Playboy Playmate, of which daughter Dannielynn is the sole heir, and that of her late oil baron husband's estate.

    --Reporting by Claudia Rosenbaum

    Gallery from E: Tax troubles

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Bad song choices send Elise home on 'American Idol'

    Fox via Getty Images

    The bottom two contestants, Hollie Cavanagh, left, and Elise Testone hug onstage during Thursday's "American Idol" elmination show.

    After three weeks of being unpredictable, "American Idol" voters finally did something conventional and sent home someone who was expecting the bad news.

    For Elise Testone, nothing on "Idol" had been easy. Every week she seemingly had to start from square one with both the judges and a less-committed fan base. Mentor Jimmy Iovine, who is right more often than he’s wrong, noted a couple of weeks ago that her difficulty at getting votes after anything other than spectacular performances meant that she was always one bad week away from going home.

    That proved to be the case, and the inevitable happened when she was voted off Thursday. She finished in sixth place, meaning the rebirth of classic rock on “Idol” will have to wait for another year.

    Though the judges and Jimmy criticized Elise for her song choices, there was nothing wrong with her vocals. To channel one of Randy Jackson’s favorite phrases, she can definitely sing. Her problem was the same thing that often vexes contestants at this stage – voters tend to pick singers who sound like people already on the radio or on their iPods.

    Elise stayed in her classic-rock lane on the show, and it worked out well for her most of the time. But on a night where there wasn’t anyone who did truly awful, she was the finalist who didn’t sound like anyone on the radio. People who sing like Elise does rarely last until the end on “Idol,” so making it even this far was a surprise.

    The shame of it was that they had to send her home instead of the other live acts. Given the efforts of Queen Extravaganza, Katy Perry and season 10's Stefano Langone on Thursday night, any of them would have been more deserving of the boot.

    Also in the bottom three this week were Skylar Laine and Hollie Cavanagh. Skylar was a surprise given how well she’s done lately, which will surely get her fans pumped up to vote earlier and more often next week. Hollie was much better this week than last, but it would be a big shock if she wasn’t the next to go.

    That having been said, Skylar’s low vote total wasn’t the shocker of the night. That goes to Ryan Seacrest, who looked like he was totally cured from whatever ailed him on Wednesday’s show. (Whatever he took, we want some for the next time we get sick.)

    Meanwhile, despite getting similar feedback as Elise as far as song choice is concerned, Phillip Phillips avoided the bottom three yet again and looks like a lock for the final. He had an off week, had his song choices criticized and he still gets nothing but love from the crowd. Will he have to throw up onstage to lose some fan support? We're starting to wonder.

    Joining him in the top three were Joshua Ledet and ... Jessica Sanchez! It’s great news for Jessica, who is making the judges look smart for using the save on her. Joshua, on the other hand, has such a big voice and great attitude that it’s hard not to like him, and the judges clearly do.

    Still, like everyone else, he’s just one bad week away from going home.

    What did you think of Jimmy's criticisms of Elise? Was he right, or too harsh? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page!

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

     

  • Say 'nevermore' to 'The Raven'

    Incentive Film Productions

    John Cusack stars as Poe in "The Raven."

    REVIEW: The raven had it right in Edgar Allan Poe's most famous poem.

    "Nevermore" is precisely what filmgoers will be vowing after sitting through "The Raven," a trumped-up bit of gothic malarkey that proposes to show what the melancholy author was up to during his last few days.

    Poe, for anyone who was sleeping through ninth grade English class, was a poet and short story writer who died in 1849 at age 40 after being found delirious on a street in Baltimore. The cause of death is unknown, though it has been attributed to alcoholism, cerebral hemorrhage, cholera and various other causes.

    "The Raven" concocts another explanation. This period thriller uses the life and work of Poe (John Cusack) to construct a plot in which a copycat killer is trying to get Poe's attention by murdering victims in grisly ways that match up with the author's stories. One victim, for example, dies after a swinging pendulum slices him in half.

    Soon, the mysterious killer has kidnapped Poe's fiancée (Alice Eve) and buried her alive in a wooden box beneath the floorboards. He then taunts Poe with additional murders that serve as clues as to his fiancée's whereabouts.

    This sort of literary speculation and reframing can be amusing. Remember "Agatha" (1979) or, more recently, "Finding Neverland" (2004) and "Becoming Jane" (2007)?

    The problem is that "The Raven," with its constant swirl of fog and period costumes, isn't much fun or even scary. As directed by James McTeigue ("V for Vendetta") and co-written by Ben Livingston and Hannah Shakespeare, the movie is excessively busy, muddled and full of verbose and vituperative speeches by Poe, the better to show, apparently, that he was a wordsmith.

    Cusack attacks the role with vigor but not a lot of subtlety or depth. His Poe is a tippler, a sentimentalist and a great believer that his talent is under-appreciated. It doesn't help that Cusack is saddled with having to deliver heaping shovelfuls of background information on Poe, clumsily dropping into conversation such biographical nuggets as that his mother was an actress, that he attended and was kicked out of West Point, and that his beloved wife died of tuberculosis (the movie fails to point out that she was both a cousin and only 13 when the then 27-year-old writer wed her).

    The film was shot in Hungary and Serbia, with old world Europe subbing for the cobble-stoned streets of 19th-century Baltimore. The supporting cast is stuffed with capable Brits, including Brendan Gleeson, Luke Evans and - this is of special note for fans of "Downton Abbey" - Brendan Coyle, who plays Mr. Bates on the Emmy-winning period drama.

    Despite its essential crumminess, "The Raven" does serve a purpose. High-school English teachers trying desperately to get adolescents to crack the pages of Poe's work can use it as a starting point to induce students into believing that the 19th-century author may have had a jump or two on Stephen King when it came to depicting the macabre.

    More in msnbc Entertainment:

  • Fox renews 'Fringe' for a fifth and final season

    Andrew Matusik / Fox

    The cast of "Fringe," from left to right: Jasika Nicole, Lance Reddick, John Noble, Anna Torv, Joshua Jackson, Blair Brown and Seth Gabel.

    "Fringe" creator J.J. Abrams is getting his wish: The show "will continue into a fifth season that will allow the series to conclude in a wild and thrilling way," he said in a statement Thursday. "All of us at (production company) Bad Robot are forever indebted to our viewers and the amazingly supportive Fox network for allowing the adventures of Fringe Division to not only continue, but to resolve in a way that perfectly fits the show.”

    Fox announced the renewal of the sci-fi drama for a final, 13-episode season on Thursday afternoon.

    The fate of the low-rated show had been in question. The network's entertainment president told reporters in January that the drama, about an FBI division that explores a parallel universe, may be in trouble because it was so expensive. "We lost a lot of money on the show," Kevin Reilly said. "We are not in the business of losing money."

    On Thursday, Reilly said in a statement: "'Fringe' is a remarkably creative series that has set the bar as one of television’s most imaginative dramas. Bringing it back for a final 13 allows us to provide the climactic conclusion that its passionate and loyal fans deserve. The amazing work the producers, writers and the incredibly talented cast and crew have delivered the last four seasons has literally been out of this world. Although the end is bittersweet, it’s going to be a very exciting final chapter.”

    Until then, check out the season five trailer:

     

    "Fringe's" season four finale will be a two-parter airing on May 4 and 11 at 9 p.m. on Fox.

    What would you like to see happen in the series finale? Tell us on our Facebook page!

     

     

    More in The Clicker

  • Man charged with assault after demanding moonwalk dance at gunpoint

    Bettmann / Corbis

    Michael Jackson performed the moonwalk for the first time on television on "Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever" in 1983.

    A 30-year-old Idaho resident was charged with felony assault when he took his love of dance a step too far and allegedly forced another man to perform Michael Jackson's always-tricky moonwalk routine at gunpoint.

    According to a report in the Coeur d'Alene Press, sheriff's deputies arrived at the home of John Ernest Cross on Monday after being informed he was using drugs and had ordered another man to make with the moves made famous by the late King of Pop -- or else.

    On Tuesday, Cross' bail was set at $20,000, and he was ordered not to contact the other man.

    Of course, as dance buffs know, even if Cross' as-yet unidentified and unwilling dance partner managed to master the moonwalk, he wasn't just following in Jackson's back-sliding footsteps. The origins are said to go back to jazz great and bandleader Cab Calloway or even earlier, though no one can deny Jackson made the move a pop culture fixture.

    Check out some gun-free, early inspirations for the dance in this YouTube clip:

    Also in the Entertainment blog:

  • TLC reuniting for a tour with virtual Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes?

    FilmMagic

    Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins, left, Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, center, and Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas of TLC.

    Marking their 20th anniversary as a group, and 10 years following the death of Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, the remaining members of R&B girl group TLC announced Wednesday they would be reuniting this year, and reportedly will bring back their deceased counterpart through digital projections.

    Tionne "T-Boz" Watkins told Essence Magazine, “Yes, we’re going on tour; we are in negotiations now with LA. Reid, so we’ll see what happens. A lot of cool things are coming up.”

    Additionally, TMZ reports that a representative of the group told the outlet that tour dates in five major cities have already been booked, and that Watkins and Rozonda "Chilli" Thomas, her singing partner, will be incorporating Lopes into the shows by “projecting her image on a big screen and working her vocals into the live performances.”

    It sounds similar to the Tupac hologram phenomenon, though the details provided suggest a simpler technical replication.

    Watkins and Thomas also discussed the biopic VH1 is producing about the trio, currently being casted.

    Thomas told Essence, “I’m really excited about it; this was a dream of mine. I knew that we would have a movie about us one day. I want to go for someone unknown to play us. I really would prefer to reach out and find someone that resembles us and who really has the acting chops and who can dance.”

    TLC was a prominent voice in the ‘90s American R&B diaspora, and is the second best-selling American female group of all time. Their debut album “Oooooooh…On the TLC Tip” sold four million copies worldwide, and was later topped by their sophomore release, “CrazySexyCool,” which was certified diamond after selling 22 million copies internationally with hits such as “Waterfalls,” and “Creep.”

    After releasing two more studio projects, the girls went on indefinite hiatus after Lopes died in a vehicle collision in Honduras in 2002.

    Watkins described her passing. “I was sitting in a rocking chair in my daughter’s room after putting her down when I got a call from Chilli. She was screaming. I had just gotten out the hospital from fighting sickle cell so I had to be careful about getting upset. Everybody was trying to keep me calm …

    "I remember staying up all night and Patti Labelle and Missy Elliot calling me," Watkins said. "Whitney Houston was at Lisa’s funeral. She sat behind me and rubbed my shoulders for two hours, while telling me, 'It’s going to be OK, it’s going to be all right.' Right before that, I remember Lisa played a trick where she went missing and nobody knew where she was. This was the one time I wish she was joking and doing one of her stunts, but she wasn’t.”

    This year would mark the first time TLC has reunited since Lopes’ death.

    Related content:

  • Death row chef shares last meal requests on 'Final 24 Hours'

    Discovery

    Death row chef Brian Price shares a sample last meal selection in "Death Row: The Final 24 Hours."

    Death row inmates facing the ultimate sentence have little to look forward to, but one thing some of them focus on is the personalized menu they're afforded on their final day. A new Discovery Channel special, "Death Row: The Final 24 Hours," takes a closer look at that tradition.

    Brian Price, a former inmate in Texas' Huntsville prison, became a death-row chef while serving time and prepared 189 last meals during his lock up. In a sneak peek for the special, Price shared his thoughts about the process.

    "Imagine what's going through their minds: 'This is my last meal on this earth,'" Price said before revealing some sample menus that featured mostly mundane foods, such as fried chicken, tossed salad, burritos and BLTs.

    "I would start putting the ingredients together -- whatever I was going to need on the day of the execution," he said of his routine. "I'd prepare it ahead of time if I could."

    For Price, the meals had meaning beyond the ingredients.

    "The death row inmates, they didn't have a choice of whatever meal they were going to have every day," he explained. "Here they have a choice, something they probably haven't had in two decades."

    The rules regulating last meals vary from state to state. According to the special, Florida provides a maximum allowance of $40. In Oklahoma, the limit is capped at $15. As for Price's home state of Texas, on-request last meals became a thing of the past last year.

    Price, who authored a book titled "Meals to Die For," felt so passionate about restoring the tradition that he offered to prepare every last meal in Texas at his own expense. The state declined his offer.

    "Death Row: The Final 24 Hours" airs Monday, April 30, at 10 p.m. ET on the Discovery Channel.

    Do you think death row inmates should have the right to a final meal of their choosing? What would your last meal be? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

     

    More in The Clicker:

  • The Killers sax player Tommy Marth commits suicide at 33

    Updated 10:50 a.m. PT: LOS ANGELES -- A saxophonist for rock band The Killers died earlier this week at his Las Vegas home from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head, a spokeswoman for the Clark County Coroner said on Thursday.

    Thomas "Tommy" Marth, 33, who played saxophone on live tours with The Killers between 2008 and 2010 and on their albums "Sam's Town" and "Day & Age," was found dead on Monday.

    His death has been ruled a suicide by officials in Clark County, Nev., where Las Vegas is located.

    "Last night we lost our friend Thomas Marth. Our prayers are with his family. There's a light missing in Las Vegas tonight. Travel well, Tommy," The Killers posted on Twitter.

    The Killers, made up of lead singer Brandon Flowers, guitarist Dave Keuning, bassist Mark Stoermer and drummer Ronnie Vannucci, rose to fame in 2004 with their debut album "Hot Fuss," and have gained global success with singles such as "Mr Brightside" and "When You Were Young."

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
  • 'Bohemian Rhapsody' becomes family jam on the way to school

    One dad has figured out a clever way not to fight with his kids over the radio on the way to school in the morning. Rather than alternate stations, he and his three children sing along to Queen, in a Broadway-musical-meets-rock-concert sort of fashion.

    Earning him copious “cool parenting” points from his growing virtual audience, the dad, a YouTube user going as “southlandification,” uploaded a video of himself, his two adolescent daughters and his baby boy on April 11, as they drove to school during their daily routine.

    Writes southlandification, “It has become a morning habit to sing “Bohemian Rhapsody” on the way to school in the morning. Depending on traffic, we can usually start the song as we pull out of the driveway, and pull into the school just as the song ends.”

    The tradition is much more than simple lip-synching, however. Both the kids and dad follow the vocal impressions of Freddie Mercury and crew almost to a tee, and break out into dance-mode behind their seatbelts during the rock interlude in the middle. Even the young boy in a carseat, who seems to forget a lyric or two throughout the progression, offers an appropriate head-bang when he’s at a loss for words.

    Remarkably, the dad manages to stay focused on the road the entire time despite the dramatic choreography.

    One of Queen’s greatest hits, “Bohemian Rhapsody” was released in 1976, selling more than a million copies worldwide, and ranking number 163 on Rolling Stone’s list of the “Greatest Songs of All Time” in 2004. The record saw a resurge in popularity in 1991 after Mercury’s untimely death, and the following year when it was featured in the film, “Wayne’s World.”

    Now, it appears, a whole generation is being exposed.

    “Teach the children well,” writes user RethinkPopMusic on YouTube.

    “It's like that scene from “Step Brothers,”” comments DriftMissile. “Except with an awesome song and the world’s greatest dad.

    Adds bulmeruk, “I have a feeling your kids are going to be great people, with excellent taste in music.”

    Is there a particular song you sing with your kids on the way to school? Tell us on Facebook.

    Related content:

  • Michael Jackson’s surgical mask, worn on the eve of his death, now up for sale

    Nate D. Sanders.com

    The black surgical mask Michael Jackson was often seen wearing when he was alive is up for auction, and already a hot commodity on the market board.

    Contributed by Jackson’s former personal bodyguard, Eric Muhammad, who signed a certificate stating the pop icon wore it the day before he died, the item is being bid on through auctioneer Nate D. Sanders, and already has stacked up more than $21,000 through seven bidders alone. 

    Described as “the mask that covered the singer's nose and mouth” during his final rehearsal for comeback tour, “This Is It,” the silk guise is said to have been tailored for Jackson and shows “visible traces of his makeup.” Additionally, the auction site notes, “a single dark strand of Jackson's hair accompanies the mask.”

    Bidding for the musician’s relict ends April 30.

    Sanders told TODAY.com he predicted the mask would sell for “at least $50,000,” and that Jackson’s estate would not receive profits from the trade.

    The pop star passed away on June 25, 2009, and there have previously been other auctions and exhibitions showcasing his remaining artifacts. The Associated Press reported in December 2011 that furniture from the mansion Jackson was renting when he died, including beds, chairs, clocks, paintings, dishes and other objects, sold for nearly $1 million through Julien’s auctions, even though the singer didn’t own most of it. His mere touch was enough to raise the value exponentially.

    According to AP, a kitchen chalkboard where Jackson's children wrote "I love daddy," went for $5,000, and an armoire upon which Jackson wrote a message to himself on the mirror fetched $25,750.

    Julien also sold Jackson’s “Thriller” jacket for $1.8 million at a prior event.

    As for the mask, Sanders’ site estimates it could tip the scales at $150,000.

    Related content:

  • Canadian supergroup raps tribute song to Bill Murray

    There are fans of Bill Murray, and then there are fans. And it's hard to imagine a more dedicated set of fans of the "Ghostbusters" and "Groundhog Day" star than Sweatshop Union, a supergroup of Canadian rap acts who have a new single titled simply, "Bill Murray."

    The beats are solid but the lyrics (and the repetition of Murray's face in the video) are what sell the song:

    You'll never wake up and be
    Half the man me and Bill is
    Was then and still is
    Hands down the billest
    There really ain't another one
    Grand like your mother's mum
    Chill, you ain't like Murray, Bill
    More like O'Reilly
    So try me.

    (Note: Some language in the video may offend some readers.)

     

    (There's also an amusing passing reference to "Chevy Chasin' a dream" -- remember, Murray and "Community's" Chevy Chase were once on "Saturday Night Live" and "Caddyshack" together -- and nods to characters from several Murray films, including "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou" and "The Royal Tenenbaums."

    Sweatshop Collective includes several rap names which may be more familiar above the border than below, but is comprised of members of Dirty Circus, Pigeon Hole, Krypios and Innocent Bystander. The tune is part of a new release called "The Bill Murray EP," which was released via Urbnet.

    And for completeists out there: This isn't even the first Murray-titled/inspired tune; Gorillaz (another supergroup of sorts) released "Bill Murray" a few years ago, though he's not name-checked in the lyrics.

    Who knew that the 61-year old actor's latest starring role would be as a muse?

    Also in Entertainment:

     

  • 'Avengers' a super, heroic story poised to take on the world

    Chris Hemsworth as Thor and Chris Evans as Captain America make up two members of the super team in "The Avengers."

    REVIEW: The All-Star Game of modern superhero extravaganzas, "The Avengers" is humongous -- the film Marvel and its legions of fans have been waiting for. It's hard to imagine that anyone with an appetite for the trademark's patented brand of fantasy, effects, mayhem and strangely dressed he-men will be disappointed; not only does this eye-popping 3-D display of visual effects fireworks feature an enormously high proportion of action scenes, but director Joss Whedon has adroitly balanced the celebrity circus to give every single one of the superstar characters his or her due. Worldwide box-office returns will be, in a word, Marvelous.

    During the past several years, Marvel has, with accelerated speed, expanded its cinematic repertoire of over-muscled, generally double-identitied heroes not otherwise encumbered by exclusive contracts with other studios -- most notably The Hulk, Iron Man, Thor and Captain America -- to arrive at the point where this summit meeting of superhuman good guys could be assembled. (A prominent relative, Spider-Man, has his own reboot coming up this summer.)

    VIDEO: 'The Avengers' premiere red carpet interviews

    After this, the characters will go their separate ways -- "Iron Man 3" starts shooting next month, with second chapters of "Thor" and "Captain America" set to roll within the year -- before gathering again before too many movie summers pass. With the bundle this one will make, the pressure will be on make it happen sooner rather than later.

    As creatively variable and predictably formulaic as the Marvel films have been, this one will not only make the core geek audience feel like it's died and gone to Asgard but has so much going for it that many nonfans will be disarmed and charmed. This is effects-driven, mass-appeal summer fare par excellence, that sought-after rare bird that hits all the quadrants, as marketing mavens like to say. As enormous as the production is, though, the appeal of the ensemble cast makes a crucial difference; you get enough but not too much of each of them, and they all get multiple scenes to themselves to shine.

    PHOTOS: 'Avengers' premiere: Red carpet arrivals

    To boil down the particulars of this latest attempt to bring ruin to all we hold dear, sinister Thor villain Loki (Tom Hiddleston, looking like Richard E. Grant's effete younger brother) has gained possession of the tesseract, an all-powerful substance contained in an opaque cube that not only provides unlimited sustainable energy but a portal to outer space. "I am burdened with glorious purpose," Loki purrs while taunting eye-patched S.H.I.E.L.D. master Samuel L. Jackson (finally with something to do in a Marvel film) with the promised arrival of his army of outer-space warriors.

    Down but not out, the good guys begin assembling on board one of the cooler modes of transport seen anywhere in a while, a giant (and beautifully rendered) aircraft carrier that can rise out of the water to become an invisible space ship -- hence, a helicarrier -- and serve as a first-rate staging area for operations against Loki. Among those arriving on board are Bruce Banner, otherwise known as The Hulk (Mark Ruffalo, the third actor, after Eric Bana and Edward Norton, to give the green giant a big-screen go); Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow (Scarlet Johansson), a sultry, scarlet-haired assassin first seen turning the tables on nasty interrogators despite being strapped to a chair; Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Loki's long-locked brother and bearer of the universe's mightiest hammer; and Mr. Old School himself, Steve Rogers, aka Captain America (Chris Evans), a World War II hero who's not quite up to speed on all the latest super-technology but carries an impenetrable shield. For his part, Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark, better known as Iron Man, joins incipient girlfriend Pepper (Gwyneth Paltrow) for a brief tete-a-tete before deigning to lend his special expertise to the cause.

    Although they really should be saving their energy for the battle against Loki and his minions, the Avengers team can't resist getting into it with each other from time to time. One could say that this is just gratuitous time-killing, but it could as persuasively be argued that watching The Hulk duke it out with Thor for bragging rights as to who's tougher is what such a film is all about; at least there's nothing perfunctory about it, as there is when superheroes routinely dispatch aliens and enemies who exist just to get blown away. The friction between Iron Man and Captain America, for example, is all about style and attitude; the former is far too irreverent and glib for the latter, for whom patriotism and coming to the rescue are not laughing matters.

    PHOTOS: 28 of Summer's most anticipated movies: 'Avengers,' 'Dark Knight,' 'Prometheus'

    With only one feature directorial credit to his name, the middling 2005 sci-fier "Serenity," Whedon of Buffy fame would not have been the first name on most people's lists to tame a potentially unwieldy project. But from a logistical point of view alone, he imposes a grip on the material that feels like that of a benevolent general, marshaling myriad technical resources (including an excellent use of 3-D) while, even more impressively, juggling eight major characters, giving them all cool and important things to do.

    Never, though, does the film stall to dwell on individual characters just to give them screen time; the heroes are almost always doing something that relates to the challenge at hand. Even when the impudent Loki is held prisoner in seemingly inescapable circumstances, there is still forward movement, which crests and then crashes with tsunami force near Grand Central Station in Manhattan; uncountable numbers of alien warriors arrive from the skies, accompanied by strikingly designed metal leviathans that undulate like skeletal monsters of the deep as they cruise over New York seeking targets.

    In this titanic battle, which occupies most of the film's final half-hour, all the Marvel heroes' talents are put to the test. In addition to Iron Man making a quick trip to outer space to deal with an incoming missile, special agent Clint Barton, or Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), is so good with a high-tech bow and arrow that you imagine they'll have to dragoon Katniss Everdeen into the sequel as a guest star just to see who's better. For his part, Jackson's Nick Fury has his hands full restraining army generals from nuking the Big Apple in order to off the aliens.

    PHOTOS: 'The Avengers': Comics vs. Film

    It's clamorous, the save-the-world story is one everyone's seen time and again, and the characters have been around for more than half a century in 500 comic book issues. But Whedon and his cohorts have managed to stir all the personalities and ingredients together so that the resulting dish, however familiar, is irresistibly tasty again. A quick coda reveals, to well-versed fans at least, who the new adversary in the next installment will be, underlining a reality as absolute as the turning of Earth: Especially after this, Marvel movies will go on and on and on.

    Related content:

  • Warm-hearted 'Five-Year Engagement' rings with rom-com originality

    Jason Segel and Emily Blunt in "The Five-Year Engagement"

    REVIEW: A warm-hearted look at what happens when a storybook romance hits a speed bump, "The Five-Year Engagement" originates with a pre-mythologized meet-cute and ends with Hollywood whimsy but insists on making the hurdles between as little like rom-com contrivance as the filmmakers can get away with. Much more successful than Stoller's solo outing, "Get Him to the Greek," this latest collaboration for director Nicholas Stoller and co-screenwriter/star Jason Segel never hits the peaks of laughter "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" achieved but will please the team's fans while -- no penises here -- appealing to a more conservative crowd as well.

    PHOTOS: 'The Muppets' Premiere Red Carpet Arrivals

    Segel and Emily Blunt play Tom and Violet, who met at a New Year's costume party (he dressed as a bunny, as if the big lug weren't cuddly enough) and were smitten by midnight. We hear the story multiple times, as they tell it to themselves and others, but when we meet them, they're already in the real world -- where elaborately constructed wedding proposals fall apart and, if they're not careful, a happy couple's engagement party might be upstaged by romance among the celebrants.

    Their wedding is postponed when Violet gets a postdoc job in Michigan, forcing a two-year relocation from lovely San Francisco, where Tom had been in line for a prestigious head-chef gig. Although willing to take one for the team, Tom suffers in the icy Midwest, devolving into a careerless mountain man just a step removed from another pathetic "faculty spouse" played by Chris Parnell.

    Meanwhile, Tom's old cooking pal Alex (Chris Pratt), set up by the script as a culinary Falstaff, becomes a family man. Pratt, who steals his first scenes and promises more fun to come, trades his dunce cap for fatherhood and leaves Segel hanging -- a scenario that will ring true for many men of a certain age in the audience. As Tom falls into a rabbit hole, Violet grows more engaged with colleagues -- Mindy Kaling is underused here, but Rhys Ifans, as the group's charismatic leader, is perfectly cast.

    Like producer Judd Apatow's own "Funny People," "Engagement" isn't afraid of running longer than viewers expect of a romantic comedy. But unlike that (underrated) film, no one can accuse "Engagement" of jumping narrative horses midstream: Stoller and Segel make the audience feel the grind of this pause in the couple's plans. They keep the comic vibe afloat with occasional false-start wedding attempts, but by the time the Michigan stay is extended, the trouble this couple is in bears little resemblance to the usual rom-com hiccups.

    "The Five-Year Engagement" winds up promoting a romantic ideal that, while still wrapped in Hollywood's ribbons, feels a bit more like something viewers might see in their own lives -- whether they're lucky enough to have their first kiss accompanied by New Year's fireworks or not.

    Related content:

  • Mila Kunis calls Ashton Kutcher dating rumors 'absurd'

    Getty Images, AP file

    Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher.

    So much for Jackie and Michael getting back together again. Rumors of longtime friends Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis being an item started swirling last week, but as much as it would have been cute to see a "That 70's Show" relationship come to reality, it's not happening.

    MORE: Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis: New Couple Alert?

    Kunis shoots down the idea, telling Extra, "It's absurd! A friend is a friend."

    Yes, and as friends, they do things like taking a trip to Santa Barbara, having a sushi dinner and enjoying a rumored night in at Kutcher's pad.

    A source close to Demi Moore's ex tells People, "They're both single, having fun. There's nothing serious going on--just friends having fun." Another source tells the mag that Ashton was, "so in love with [Mila] for a while when they worked together...It never happened, but I'm not surprised by this--at all."

    GALLERY: Fashion Spotlight: Mila Kunis

    But they're just friends, you guys, so stop getting your hopes up.

    Related content:

  • Sick Ryan Seacrest takes center stage on 'American Idol'

    The biggest upset on “American Idol” Wednesday night wasn’t anything the six remaining finalists did. It was that Ryan Seacrest managed to remain upright for the whole two hours.

    Fox via Getty Images

    "American Idol" contestants, from left, Jessica Sanchez, Skylar Laine, Joshua Ledet, Elise Testone, Phillip Phillips and Hollie Cavanagh stand onstage as host Ryan Seacrest talks to the judges Wednesday night.

    Pre-show rumors indicated that he was too sick to take the stage and would be replaced by a substitute host. While he soldiered on and fulfilled his contractual obligations, all the time in the world with the makeup folks couldn’t keep him from looking like death warmed over or get him to stray far from either a chair or the judges’ station. His usual dapper look also took a hit in the form of a missing tie and a rumpled-looking dress shirt that wasn't even buttoned all the way up. Even the presence of girlfriend Julianne Hough couldn’t get him to his usual energy level, perhaps because (as Ryan explained it) she was a little too amped up to see Phillip Phillips sing.

    Or perhaps the low energy level was because two hours is just too long for these episodes. Here’s a tip: When you need two themes in a week (Queen and contestants’ choice/wacky video clips this time), you’re risking that the audience falls asleep or changes the channel before voting starts.

    Based on what’s happened over the past couple of weeks, predicting what’s going to happen on Thursday’s results show is a lost cause. “Idol” voters seem to be making their selections based on random number generators rather than doing the same thing every week. But considering that viewers have been unforgiving of strange song choices, both Phillip and Elise Testone have reason to worry.

    Phillip finally picked a Dave Matthews song, embracing the obvious comparison to DMB, but it was “The Stone.” That’s not one of the group’s better-known tunes, and Jennifer Lopez was afraid that it was too wacky to resonate with the “Idol” voters. Even his earlier rendition of “Fat Bottomed Girls,” which was nothing but fun, wasn’t enough to make J.Lo rest easy.

    Elise went with Jimi Hendrix for her second song, but it was “Bold as Love” instead of one of the conventional Hendrix songs. Again, this had the judges concerned, though “I Want It All” might have been the best of the Queen covers of the night.

    “You gotta do songs that people know. You can't pick cherries with your back to the tree,” said Steven Tyler. Words to live by for anyone who’s ever tried to pick cherries with their backs to the tree. Which would be “nobody.”

    It’s funny advice from the “Idol” judges, urging people to play it safe. Clearly the back-to-back low vote totals from Jessica Sanchez and Colton Dixon unnerved them. Then again, with Randy Jackson saying things like, “You don’t have to vote for just one person – you can vote for all of them,” sometimes you have to wonder if the trio on the panel understands what the competition is all about anyway.

    Jessica could well be in trouble again for her song choices, safe though they were. Sure, she laid it on very thick with “Dance For My Father” (did you know that her father is deploying for Singapore soon? And he’ll be at Thursday’s show? Vote for her or you hate all dads everywhere!) but “Bohemian Rhapsody” was very forgettable and understated. She also didn’t do much to erase Jimmy Iovine’s earlier criticism that she sings songs that are too old for her. She also sang first, so how many people actually remembered how well she did by the end of the night?

    (And speaking of Jimmy ... where were his mentoring clips? We saw him briefly in the audience, but that's it. Free Jimmy Iovine!)

    Hollie Cavanagh will be in danger every week until she’s actually voted off, but getting to close the show with “The Climb” gives her every chance at staying on. Ryan called it the perfect song at the perfect time, which is always nice to hear. Meanwhile, both Skylar Laine and Joshua Ledet were lavishly praised, so it would be a major upset if they left.

    But they can’t rest easy regardless. For this year’s “Idol” audience, major upsets are a weekly occurrence.

    As for Ryan, he'll survive. "Feeling better now. Thnx throat coat," he tweeted after the taping. "Fun show tonight."

    Should Ryan have taken a sick day? Do you think song choice will put Phillip and Elise in the bottom three Thursday? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page!

    Want more "Idol" during "Idol"? Follow @CraigBerman as he live tweets each show.

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Bobby Brown avoids jail time with DUI plea deal

    Erika Goldring / Getty Images

    Bobby Brown will not be going to jail. The singer's attorney pleaded no contest on Brown's behalf Wednesday to a misdemeanor DUI charge from his arrest last month. 

    Photos from Us: Whitney Houston, 1963-2012

    According to the Los Angeles Times, Brown, 43, was sentenced to three years' probation and a day in Los Angeles County jail, but already gets credit for time served. In addition, Brown was fined $390 and was ordered to attend a 90-day alcohol education program. 

    The ex-husband of the late Whitney Houston was arrested March 26 at 12:20 p.m. after he was pulled over by California Highway Patrol for talking on his cellphone. Authorities said Brown later failed a field sobriety test. Brown was taken into custody and booked at the Van Nuys County Jail.

    Brown's arrest occurred just four days after Houston's autopsy results were released. The legendary singer, who was 48 at the time, died tragically on Feb. 11 of accidental drowning. She was also suffering from the effects of heart disease, which were exacerbated by ongoing cocaine use.

    Photos from Us: Whitney and Bobby's family album with Bobbi Kristina

    Brown was married to Houston for 14 years before divorcing in 2007. The two have one child together, Bobbi Kristina Brown, who is now 19. Brown met up with his daughter in the Big Apple Tuesday for some quality bonding time.

    A witness told Us Weekly exclusively that the father and daughter had lunch together at Blue Fin, located in the heart of Times Square.

    According to the witness, Bobbi Kristina "was on her phone and texting a crazy amount. She didn't seem too thrilled to be there, in all honesty."

    More in TODAY entertainment:

  • Beloved character will die on 'Grey's Anatomy' finale

    Bob D'amico / ABC

    Could one of these beloved characters be dying this season?

    The Grim Reaper is once again visiting "Grey's Anatomy." But unlike the last time death decended among the staff of Seattle Grace, creator Shonda Rhimes told TV Guide that just one character will be meeting his or her maker during the season finale. So relax -- a little.

    Sure, the body count won't be nearly as high as the tragic hospital shooting that killed off so many of the Mercy West doctors during season six. But Rhimes revealed it would be a much loved character going six feet under.

    "A lot of our writers were crying," Rhimes told TV Guide. "There's some really shocking, horrible moments."

    Rhimes also said that "it scares me how fans are going to react."

    Oh dear.

    With the original stars' contracts expiring after the current season and no word yet on renewals, it seems anyone from the cast could be walking out of Seattle Grace's doors for good. After all, with the residents -- Meredith, Cristina, Alex, Jackson and April -- all interviewing at other hospitals, there could be other ways of exiting without dying.

    The season finale of "Grey's Anatomy" airs on May 17 on ABC.

    Which characters would you miss the most if they left or died? Tell us on our Facebook page!

     

     

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Exclusive: 'Idol's' Colton Dixon is going to White House Correspondents' Dinner

    Ray Tamarra / Getty Images

    Colton Dixon finished in 7th place on "Idol," but he's going to the White House Correspondents' Dinner this weekend.

    Colton Dixon is going from "American Idol" to the nation’s capital.

    The 20 year-old singer -- who was shockingly eliminated last Thursday-- will attend this weekend’s annual White House Correspondents' Dinner as a special guest of The Christian Broadcasting Network, TODAY.com has learned exclusively.

    “I think it was pretty clear from the beginning where Colton’s heart is,” CBN news director Rob Allman told us. “His heart is in Christianity and his strong feeling for God. As soon as he was voted off, I sent an email saying we should try to get Colton to be our guest if he would.”

    While the Tennessee native probably won’t get to meet the president, he will rub elbows with some of the biggest celebrities in the world.  Previous guests at the star-studded event have include Courteney Cox, Donald Trump and Justin Bieber -- as well as past "Idol" hopefuls Katharine McPhee, Chris Sligh and Mandisa.

    Influential members of the media with space at their tables try to invite guests who “hopefully will catch some attention but will also send a message about what their organization is about,” Allman said. 

    CBN also extended an invite to Green Bay Packers wide-receiver and Donald Driver, who had to back out due to a last-minute commitment for “Dancing With the Stars.”

    Allman admitted he followed Dixon’s "Idol" journey “as much as you can on television and on the web,” and said he was particularly impressed when the singer chose to ignore producers’ suggestions to refrain from expressing his spirituality on the show.

    "When we first started the Twitter and Facebook stuff, they said beware of political and religious tweets," Dixon told TODAY.com last month. "Just because it can turn off voters or whatever. But, you know, being a Christian is who I am.  It is a part of me musically. It is what I want to do after the show -- go into Christian music."

    And Allman believes Dixon will be the next big sensation in that genre.

    “Based on some of the things that he performed, I think he can write his own ticket,” Allman said.  “He can clearly go quite a ways -- probably the furthest that any ‘American Idol’ contestant, as a Christian singer, could go.”

    Do you think Colton could have a successful music career that isn't limited to Christian music? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

    Sean Daly runs the blog SingersAndCritics.com, which covers reality singing-competition shows.

    Related content:

    More in The Clicker:

  • Armless drummer wows the world with his percussive prowess

    Defying life’s challenges is one thing, but armless Romanian drummer Cornel Hrisca-Munn could give even the top musicians heat at their game.

    The 20-year-old Romanian, brought to England orphaned with no arms and a deformed leg, has put his remarkable percussive skills on display via his YouTube channel, jamming tirelessly to the likes of Red Hot Chili Peppers, Tinie Tempah, and Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe,” his lack of limbs completely irrelevant to his standout talent. And it doesn’t stop there. He’s also attuned as a producer, adding beats to the mix and giving his own spin to many current mainstream hits.

    In an interview with msnbc.com, Hrisca-Munn explained his inspiration for the craft.

    “When I started high school I quite fancied learning a music instrument. I looked into it and thought the drums would be the only instrument I would be physically capable of,” he says. “I started having lessons, then a couple of years later started to teach. Over the years, I grew more and more passionate about the drums, and kept playing! I also taught myself to play the bass, and have been doing that for a few years.”

    Hrisca-Munn, who calls himself a “servant of God,” was born physically impaired, and given only days to live, according UK’s Telegraph. His birth mother dropped him off at an institution in the Romanian countryside, and it wasn’t until a visiting doctor noticed him at seven months, in need of care, that the budding artist was given a home in Britain, where he currently resides.

    While he doesn’t have hands, Hrisca-Munn learned to play drums left-handed, and at the age of 14, placed second out of 400 contestants in a national drumming competition. His next move, of course, was to start a band, and The City Walls were formed. He explained his percussion technique on a YouTube post, commenting, “I play a normal right handed kit set up, but have an artificial right leg, so use my (real) left leg on the bass drum for quicker beats.”

    His latest video, ”Hot Right Now, was uploaded three hours before this post, and already accrued over 67,000 hits. In addition to such creative initiatives, the young impresario is student at Oxford University, studying philosophy and theology and an active fundraiser for the disabled.

    As for whether he might tackle a classic act, like, say, Led Zeppelin in the near future, Hrisca-Munn tells msnbc.com, "I'll do literally anything, got some older stuff lined up for my next batch of videos…All secret I'm afraid. Everyone will see soon though!"

    Related content:

  • Which actor should get 'Fifty Shades of Grey' role on big screen?

    Chelsea Lauren / Getty Images Contributor

    Ian Somerhalder

    There has been much buzz around the erotic romance trilogy that begins with "Fifty Shades of Grey." The first book, which features a dominant-submissive relationship between recent college grad Anastasia Steele and hunky billionaire Christian Grey, has soared up bestseller lists, selling more than 2 million copies in April alone.

    And with success like that, it was inevitable that Hollywood would come calling. Author E. L. James answered the call, selling the rights to Universal Studios for a reported $5 million.

    So, now the question -- who will play the on-screen version of the very XXX book character Christian Grey? In the novels, Grey is described as an "attractive, very attractive" tall, athletically built man "with unruly dark copper-colored hair and intense, bright gray eyes" -- a description that could fit many a leading man in Hollywood. However, if the film adaptation comes even kind of close to the book, this would be far from a PG-13 (or R, for that matter) rated movie.

    Ian Somerhalder, star of "The Vampire Diaries," told Ryan Seacrest on April 23 that he is interested in taking on the role.

    "I absolutely would be up for that," Somerhalder said. "It could be very, very amazing. I have the book and I just started reading it. That would be a pretty incredible thing, and hopefully that could pan out. ... Beyond the shadow of a doubt, I think that would be a phenomenal opportunity!"

    Ethan Miller / Getty Images

    Chris Pine

    "Star Trek" star Chris Pine also says he might be up for taking on Grey.

    “I do know about ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ because Alice Eve, who’s in (the ‘Star Trek’ sequel), has been reading it like crazy, so yeah, I’ve heard about it,” the actor told Access Hollywood. “It’d be a hell of a choice for me, I think. It sounds like an interesting film.”

    To say the very least.

    Among the other actors rumored to be in talks for "Fifty" -- Matt Bomer, Henry Cavill, Max Irons and Armie Hammer.

    As for the role of Anastasia? Potential leading ladies include Kristen Stewart, Rooney Mara, Blake Lively, Elizabeth Olsen and Jennifer Lawrence.

    So, for those of you who have read the books, who do you think should play Christian in the movie? Cast your vote and share your thoughts on Facebook.

    Related content:

Jump to April 2012 archive page: 1 2 3 4 ... 12