Friday, 27 June 2008

Jessica Biel - Evans Dating Guerra


JESSICA BIEL's ex-boyfriend CHRIS EVANS has found love with Cuban model VIDA GUERRA.

The pair have been dating for several weeks, and the Fantastic Four star, 27, is smitten with the 34-year-old former Playboy beauty, according to Star magazine.

A source tells the tabloid, "They've become super close, really fast. Vida hasn't had a boyfriend in while, because she has been concentrating on her acting career.

"She's so happy that she's met someone she clicked with."





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Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Headache for SAG

Hanks among those backing vote to ratify AFTRA pact





SAG celebrated its 75th anniversary this weekend in the face of a grim reality: There are only eight days left to negotiate a deal with the major producers and studios before its TV/theatrical contract expires.


Adding to the headaches for SAG's leadership, its campaign against ratification of the tentative deal cut by sister union AFTRA -- nearly 40,000 actors are in both unions -- was undercut over the weekend when Tom Hanks became the most high-profile member to sign an e-mail message from more than 100 actors urging a yes vote on the AFTRA contract.


So far, little progress has been made in the negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers, and SAG's chief negotiator Doug Allen has indicated he expects the talks to extend past the June 30 deadline.


Many in the industry speculate that SAG has slowed the negotiations process in order to see what happens with its "Vote No" campaign against sister union AFTRA's recently brokered primetime/TV contract. The AMPTP has blamed SAG's preoccupation with voting down the AFTRA contract as the reason for the slow progress.


"The negotiations stalled at almost the exact time that SAG began its anti-AFTRA campaign, and they're clearly focused on waiting until July 7 to see the results of the ratification vote," the studios said in a statement.


But others say the AMPTP is the one dragging its feet and that by not simply offering SAG the AFTRA contract, and forcing the actors union to "bargain up" to what AFTRA got in its deal, it has slowed the pace of talks.


"Despite their protests otherwise, management is trying to slow the process," Allen said in a statement Sunday. "The amount of time we spend bargaining is not the issue; the issue is management's resistance to putting reasonable proposals on the table."


The AMPTP could offer SAG a settlement proposal comparable to the AFTRA deal in the 11th hour, but the guild's campaign against the AFTRA contract makes it unlikely that would bring about a deal. If no deal is reached before the SAG contract expires, the guild will likely extend its contract. It has not sought a strike authorization from its membership.


The "AFTRA Contract Referendum" e-mail that went out over the weekend makes a case for why the 100-plus actors are voting yes.


"It benefits every working member, and will immediately put the industry back to work without rollbacks or the egregious concessions that producers were insisting on (and SAG has yet to overcome) and it sets the stage for future negotiations.


"More importantly, we are voting yes because if this contract doesn't pass, it will set us back to a place from which we may not recover," the message adds.


Others signing the e-mail include Jeffrey Tambor, James Cromwell, Tim Daly, Mike Farrell, Morgan Fairchild and Sam Freed, who is SAG's second national vp and a member of the current negotiating committee.


It's not the first time Hanks' name has come up during the tense negotiations. When SAG returned to the bargaining table May 28, following AFTRA and the AMPTP reaching a tentative deal, an e-mail from SAG board member Susan Savage was circulated that mentioned Hanks and George Clooney. Many interpreted the message to indicate that Hanks and Clooney were in support of an anti-AFTRA campaign. Both actors, through their reps, denied the claim, calling it a "fabrication," and Savage has since apologized.


Meanwhile, another member of the negotiating committee, Anne Marie Johnson, has defended the committee in an e-mail, stating that the members are "working hard every day to negotiate a good contract for SAG members" and that the AMPTP are taking them seriously.



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Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Girls Aloud to get BBC chat show

Girls Aloud are in talks to front their own chat show for the BBC.

According to Heat the band have been offered over �500,000 to make the show, which has a working title of 'An Audience With Girls Aloud' and will run for eight weeks in its first series.

The magazine quotes an anonymous source as saying: "The girls are yet to sign, but they have all agreed to it. They would each be paid �20,000 per show. The band is going strong and they all want to commit to it 100 percent."

Thursday, 5 June 2008

Woody Allen finds love is hard in "Vicky Cristina"

CANNES, France (Reuters) - His new movie "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" deals with women, men and multiple lovers, but when it comes to real-life romance, director Woody Allen, 75, says more than a single sex partner is far too many these days.


"It's hard enough to get one person," he told reporters at a Saturday news conference at the Cannes film festival. "In trying to figure out solutions in life, two tends to make it more complicated than one."


"In film, you can do it because I'm dealing with larger than life characters ... but in real life, most of us could never handle anything like that," he added.


"Vicky Cristina Barcelona," which looks at several different love relationships including a menage-a-trois, debuted to a warm reception at Cannes as one of the few light comedies here. Many films, such as prison drama "Hunger" and Lebanese war movie "Waltz with Bashir" delve into dark human conditions.


Show business newspaper Daily Variety called "Vicky Cristina" "a sexy, funny divertissement that passes as enjoyably as an idle sunny afternoon in the titular Spanish city" and added the film "is by several degrees more hot-blooded than his (Allen's) usual norm."


Allen said he definitely wanted to make the movie funny, but he also saw it as a somewhat tragic tale of people who can't fall in love, others who fall perhaps too deeply for each other, and those who marry for all the wrong reasons.


YOUNG AND IN LOVE


The movie centers on two American tourists who travel to cosmopolitan Barcelona to spend a summer. One, Vicky (Rebecca Hall), wants to spend it studying a portion of Spanish culture before she gets married, and the other Cristina (Scarlett Johansson) is on a constant search for fulfillment.