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  • 8
    Aug
    2012
    9:42am, EDT

    Jimmy Fallon on Oscar-hosting rumors: I'm not going to do it

    By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

    Despite buzz to the contrary, "Late Night" host Jimmy Fallon won't follow in the footsteps of Billy Crystal,  Steve Martin and Jon Stewart by hosting Hollywood's biggest annual event. During a Wednesday morning visit to TODAY in London, Fallon, the entertainer many considered perfect for the Academy Awards role, set the record straight about those rumors and revealed what's keeping him busy now.

    "No, I'm not going to do the Oscars," Fallon told TODAY's Matt Lauer. "It's an honor to be asked by the Academy, but it's not my year."

    Without the big red carpet gig to concern himself with, the funnyman is content to simply sit back and enjoy his current interest -- all things Olympics.

    "I love London," Fallon said in his best British accent. "They're doing the Olympics great. I see it right from my hotel TV!"


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    Not that his Olympic adventures have been limited to the boob tube. It just so happens he's had the opportunity to see the emotional action up close.

    "I went to an event -- I went to track and field," he said. "It's unbelievable; it's thrilling. I'm trying not to cry, to be honest. I'm one of the emotional people. They're running, they're pole vaulting for their county and they get up for the medals ceremony.... It's like watching those ASPCA commercials with Sarah McLachlan. I'm just crying my eyes out. I can't stop crying. I can't look; I've just got to leave."

    Fallon managed to hold back the tears long enough to take a quiz on his Olympic knowledge. Watch the clip above to see how he did.

    If not Fallon, who would you like to see host the Academy Awards? Share your picks on our Facebook page.

    Follow @ReeHines

     

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  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    1:15pm, EDT

    Morrissey rips 'blustering jingoism' of London Olympics

    Ernesto Ruscio / Getty Images file

    Morrissey performs in Rome in July.

    By Rolling Stone

    In a letter to members of his True To You fanclub, Morrissey bashed the "blustering jingoism" of the 2012 London Olympic Games and compared present-day Britain to Nazi Germany, writing, "The spirit of 1939 Germany now pervades throughout media-brand Britain." Full text of the letter follows below.

    I am unable to watch the Olympics due to the blustering jingoism that drenches the event. Has England ever been quite so foul with patriotism? The 'dazzling royals' have, quite naturally, hi-jacked the Olympics for their own empirical needs, and no oppositional voice is allowed in the free press. It is lethal to witness. As London is suddenly promoted as a super-wealth brand, the England outside London shivers beneath cutbacks, tight circumstances and economic disasters. Meanwhile the British media present 24-hour coverage of the 'dazzling royals,' laughing as they lavishly spend, as if such coverage is certain to make British society feel fully whole. In 2012, the British public is evidently assumed to be undersized pigmies, scarcely able to formulate thought.

    As I recently drove through Greece I noticed repeated graffiti seemingly everywhere on every available wall. In large blue letters it said WAKE UP WAKE UP. It could almost have been written with the British public in mind, because although the spirit of 1939 Germany now pervades throughout media-brand Britain, the 2013 grotesque inevitability of Lord and Lady Beckham (with Sir Jamie Horrible close at heel) is, believe me, a fate worse than life. WAKE UP WAKE UP.


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    Morrissey recently revealed plans to retire in two years and will kick off a North American tour on Oct. 5 in Boston.

    More Entertainment news:

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  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    2:30pm, EDT

    Conan O'Brien fires up the Olympic slow-mo camera, gets messy

    By Cody Delistraty, NBC News

    From McKayla Maroney's near-perfect vault to Michael Phelps' finger-tip finishes, slow-motion replay cameras at the Olympics have added an extra level of excitement.

    On Thursday’s "Conan," Conan O’Brien noted how cool athletes at the games look when they’re shown in super slow-motion. Rather than wallowing in his own non-Olympian uncoolness, the late-night host decided to rent a slow-mo camera for himself.

    “Pie serves,” “human sundaes” and “air hose” were just a few of the ways that he and sidekick Andy Richter abused their bodies in super slow-mo. And while their shenanigans probably aren’t Olympic worthy, with that many ruined shirts and suits, the dry cleaner certainly deserves a gold.

    Check out the video: 

     

    What would you record with a slow-mo camera? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

    Related content:


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    • 'Trampire' Kristen Stewart's affair moves Will Ferrell to tears on 'Conan'
    • The secret to Christina Hendrick's sexy success on 'Mad Men'? Her underwear

    More in The Clicker:

    • La Toya Jackson gets a reality show on OWN
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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    9:21am, EDT

    Samuel L. Jackson is obsessed with tweeting the Olympics

    Danny Moloshok / Reuters

    Samuel L. Jackson has taken to Twitter to root on the United States in the Olympics and give his unique take on everything from water polo to gymnastics judges.

    By Scott Stump

    Whether it's water polo “dopeness” or “seriously smokin’” women's beach volleyball, it’s clear that Samuel L. Jackson loves the Olympics more than a Royale with cheese.

    WHHHOOOOO! Women's 4X 200 Beatdown!! Lovin' it!, go USA!!

    — Samuel L. Jackson (@SamuelLJackson) August 2, 2012

    The popular actor has been tweeting a steady stream of commentary on all types of Olympic events while rooting on the United States at every chance. Whether it’s women’s time trial cycling, water polo, gymnastics, or synchronized diving, Jackson has made his thoughts about most Olympic competitions known to his 1.1 million Twitter followers.

    Uh Oh, Pommel Horse next! Thass like Balance Beam for dudes! Horse def has US men's numba! Oh well, Go USA!

    — Samuel L. Jackson (@SamuelLJackson) August 2, 2012

    He gave a shoutout to swimmer Michael Phelps (“Big Mike”) for setting the Olympic record for most career medals on Tuesday, and provided his unique brand of commentary on the women’s gymnastics team finals: “Okay, that was Drunk Lady Staggering Flip dismount!" he tweeted. "Made famous by many girls missing the top step in da club!”

    US hacks out a Beach Volleyball win to advance! Lil' drama for a minute!

    — Samuel L. Jackson (@SamuelLJackson) August 2, 2012

    Jackson also let loose on the gymnastics judges (SHADY!!!) and gave his opinion of the on-air commentators. The language in his tweets is closer to Jules in “Pulp Fiction” than Mace Windu in “Star Wars,” so be warned that they are not entirely family-friendly.

    Check out all of TODAY's Olympics coverage here! And follow TODAY on Twitter and Facebook for London 2012 behind the scenes!  

    Read More:

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    U.S. gymnast's dad 'embarrassed' watching viral video 
    UK teen arrested after Olympic diver Tom Daley receivers Twitter death threat 

     

     

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  • 31
    Jul
    2012
    9:41am, EDT

    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


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    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.

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  • 31
    Jul
    2012
    8:14am, EDT

    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.

    By Bruna Nessif, E! Online

    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"


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    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:

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  • 24
    Jul
    2012
    11:06am, EDT

    What's your best memory of the Summer Olympics?

    Mark Humphrey / AP

    Michael Phelps created many lasting Olympic memories in 2008, and he's hoping to do the same in 2012.

    The best athletes in the world are gathering in London for the 2012 Games. Swimmers, gymnasts, track stars, cyclists, weightlifters, boxers, basketball players and more are bringing their best game in hopes of taking home a medal.

    It's impossible to think about the Olympics without remembering all the golden moments that have come before. We want to know your favorite memory of Summer Olympics past.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Did Olga Korbut or Nadia Comaneci make you start balancing on curbs and benches around your home and school? Was your heart in your throat when Kerri Strug made that vault on her injured ankle? Did the poster of Mark Spitz and all his medals inspire you to spend hours swimming laps? Did you cheer for the Dream Team? Root on Usain Bolt? Were you screaming like Michael Phelps when the U.S. relay team beat the trash-talking French? Or maybe your memory isn't from a sporting contest -- did you tear up when Muhammed Ali lit the Olympic cauldron in Atlanta?

    Whether your memory is vintage or recent, and no matter what country, event, or athlete it involves, share it with us on Facebook. We'll collect the best for a post on Friday, the day of the opening ceremonies.

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  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    9:21pm, EDT

    Famed sports artist LeRoy Neiman dies at age 91

    By The Associated Press

    NEW YORK -- LeRoy Neiman, the painter and sketch artist best known for evoking the kinetic energy of the world's biggest sporting and leisure events with bright quick strokes, died Wednesday at age 91.

    Neiman also was a contributing artist at Playboy magazine for many years and official painter of five Olympiads. His longtime publicist Gail Parenteau confirmed his death Wednesday but didn't disclose the cause.

    Neiman was a media-savvy artist who knew how to enthrall audiences with his instant renditions of what he observed. In 1972, he sketched the world chess tournament between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer in Reykjavik, Iceland, for a live television audience.

    He also produced live drawings of the Olympics for TV and was the official computer artist of the Super Bowl for CBS.

    Neiman's "reportage of history and the passing scene ... revived an almost lost and time-honored art form," according to a 1972 exhibit catalog of the artist's Olympics sketches at the Indianapolis Museum of Art.

    "It's been fun. I've had a lucky life," Neiman said in a June 2008 interview with The Associated Press. "I've zeroed in on what you would call action and excellence. ... Everybody who does anything to try to succeed has to give the best of themselves, and art has made me pull the best out of myself."

    Neiman's paintings, many executed in household enamel paints that allowed the artist his fast-moving strokes, are an explosion in reds, blues, pinks, greens and yellows of pure kinetic energy.

    He has been described as an American impressionist, but the St. Paul, Minn., native preferred to think of himself simply as an American artist.

    Chris Trotman / Getty Images for USOC

    Artist LeRoy Neiman signs autographs at the 100 Days to Vancouver Celebration on Nov. 4, 2009 at Rockefeller Center in New York City.

    "I don't know if I'm an impressionist or an expressionist," he told the AP. "You can call me an American first. ... (but) I've been labeled doing neimanism, so that's what it is, I guess."

    He worked in many media, producing thousands of etchings, lithographs and silkscreen prints known as serigraphy.

    But his critics said Neiman's forays into the commercial world minimized him as a serious artist. At Playboy, for example, he created Femlin, the well-endowed nude that has graced the magazine's Party Jokes page since 1957.

    Neiman shrugged off such criticism.

    "I can easily ignore my detractors and feel the people who respond favorably," he said.

    Neiman was fascinated with large game animals, and twice traveled to Kenya to paint lions and elephants "in the bush" in his trademark vibrant palette.

    But it was the essence of a basketball or football game, swim meet or cycling event that captured his imagination most.

    "For an artist, watching a (Joe) Namath throw a football or a Willie Mays hit a baseball is an experience far more overpowering than painting a beautiful woman or leading political figure," Neiman said in 1972.

    With his sketchbook and pencil, trademark handlebar mustache and slicked back hair, Neiman was instantly recognizable.

    At a New York Jets game at Shea Stadium in 1975, fans yelled, "Put LeRoy in," when the play wasn't going their way.

    Neiman's decades-long association with Playboy began in 1953 following a chance meeting with Hugh Hefner. It was the start of what he called "the good life" and inspiration for much of his future work.

    He regularly contributed to the magazine's "Man at His Leisure" feature, which took him to such places as the Grand National Steeplechase and Ascot in England, the Cannes Film Festival in France and the Grand Prix auto race in Monaco.

    Neiman was a self-described workaholic who seldom took vacations and had no hobbies. He worked daily in his New York City home studio at the Hotel des Artistes near Central Park that he shared with his wife of more than 50 years, Janet.

    "What else am I good for?" he said in 2008. "I don't think about anything else."

    To prove it, he said he was working on a large scale project for a Louisville, Ky., horse festival planned for 2010.

    Another later project, a 160-foot-long sports mural, hangs in the Sports Museum of America in New York that opened in 2008.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Neiman was also a portraitist who captured some of the world's most iconic figures, Frank Sinatra and Babe Ruth among them, in a style that conveyed their public image.

    "I am less concerned with how people look when they wake," he said. "A person's public presence reflects his own efforts at image development."

    One face he recorded over and over again was that of Muhammad Ali. Those painting and sketches, representing 15 years of the prizefighter's professional life, permanently reside at the LeRoy Neiman Gallery at the Muhammad Ali Center in Louisville, Ky.

    Over the years, Neiman has endowed a number of institutions, donating $6 million in 1995 for the creation of the LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies at Columbia University and $3 million to his alma mater, the Art Institute of Chicago, where he taught for a decade.

    He also donated $1 million to create a permanent home for Arts Horizons, a community art center in Harlem.

    His works are in the permanent collections of many private and public museums. The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., was selected by Neiman to house his archives.

    "I just love what I do," Neiman told the AP. "I love the passion you go through while you're creating" and the public's "very thoughtful and careful studied and emotional reaction of what you're doing."

    He added: "It's a wonderful feeling."

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