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# Monday, November 10, 2008

"Justify my love," Madonna once demanded.
And we do whatever the Material Mom commands.
 
So, to this end, we have chosen to validate Madge's obvious affection for us by ranking every one of her studio albums in descending order, right up to our favorites.

Read on, and ready yourself for Madonna's two-night stand in town this weekend:

12. "Who's That Girl?," "I'm Breathless," "Selection from Evita"

Argentina isn't crying for you, dear, it's shedding tears at your insistence upon putting out terminally lame soundtrack albums. Still, all of them have their moments: "Breathless" gave us "Vogue," one of Madonna's most aerobic tunes; the title cut for "Who's That Girl?" is solid, though that might be the worst disc she's even been associated with thanks to the incriminating presence of Scritti Politti; "Evita" is as ambitious as it is overblown. Just thank your "Lucky Star" there was no soundtrack for "Body of Evidence."

11. "American Life"

Madonna's decision to rap on the title cut was almost as poor a choice as getting hitched to Mr. Ritchie without a pre-nup -- dude is currently replacing his windshield wiper fluid with cognac. But that gaffe aside, this disc is actually kinda underrated: more svelte pop from French producer Mirwais with "Hollywood" being one of her better tunes. It's not great, and it has its ups ("Love Profusion") and its downs ("Mother and Father") but hey, that's "Life."

10. "Hard Candy"

"Come on in to my store, I got candy galore," Madonna pants on the opening cut to her latest disc. "Don't pretend you're not hungry, I've seen it before." Hmmm, wonder what she could be talking about here? Wacky Wafers? Nerds? Zagnut bars? Like all that junk, this disc is disposable, colored by huge trance synths, a hip-hop production and lots of heavy breathing, but it's still pretty tasty. "Get stupid, get stupid, get stupid. Don't stop it," Madonna commands on "Give It 2 Me," and those are pretty much the words we live by.

9. "Bedtime Stories"

Yeah, we know, understatement and Madonna go together like vomit and velour, but this is one of Madonna's warmest and most inviting albums, a blown kiss instead of a blown ... oh, never mind. Babyface, the Isley Brothers and Bjork bed hop with Madge until the mattress needs to be flipped.

8. "Like A Virgin"

Though it contains two of her signature tunes -- the title cut and "Material Girl" -- this one is like parachute pants, the Noid and Corey Feldman's career prospects -- it hasn't held up all that well with age.

7. "Confessions on a Dancefloor"

Sweaty leotard pop that comes on like a series of heart palpitations, this Disco Stu-approved confection is like eating cotton candy for breakfast. First single, "Hung Up," conjures up enough body heat to melt a polar ice cap.

6. "Erotica"

The image of a nude Material Girl, thumbing a ride at the side of the road as depicted in her "Sex" book, tends to cast a long, leggy shadow over this album, but it shouldn't: At the time of its release, this was perhaps her most forward-looking disc, with the libidinous dance pop of "Fever" and "Deeper and Deeper" prefacing the electronica boom to come. Hard to believe that this is one of her poorest sellers, but then again, Viagra had yet to be invented.

5. "Ray of Light"

An album that lives up to its name, this disc saw Madonna embracing techno like some long-lost relative. What makes "Ray of Light" so inviting is that it revels in the nuances of the genre rather than its bombast for a sleek, seductive sound that's a caress instead of a grope.

4. "Like A Prayer"

Burning crosses, black Jesus and Pepsi-Cola: Mmm, America's long history of racial tension has never been rendered so fizzy and delicious. But don't let the controversial video for the title cut sidetrack you from how great this album is: It's a climactic summation of Madonna's first decade in the spotlight, sexy and self-aware, as this pinup became increasingly hard to pin down.

3. "True Blue"

Maybe the disc with the most Madonna classics -- "Papa Don't Preach," "Open Your Heart," "Live to Tell," "La Isla Bonita" -- this album is as dense as quartz.

2. "Music"

Ride 'em cowgirl: Madonna lassos Mirwais and borrows a page from the Western wardrobe of Review-Journal editor-in-chief Thomas Mitchell to come with stuttering, whip-smart sex-tronica with lots of vocodered come-ons and serpentine beats. "Impressive Instant" might be the greatest Madonna song to never become a hit single, while the rest of the disc demonstrated that Madge could grow up without growing old.

1. "Madonna"

One of the first straight-up dance pop records is still one of the best, 25 years later. With her Betty Boop voice set against high-stepping synth lines, this album is full of doe-eyed hits that remain as memorable as that first kiss.

Contact reporter Jason Bracelin at jbracelin@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0476.

Monday, November 10, 2008 9:44:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Monday, November 03, 2008

MIAMI – With two days remaining until Election Day, Jay-Z and Sean "Diddy" Combs told voters in South Florida not to be scared away from the polls by long lines.

"It's bigger than us," Combs said. "We have to do it for our children, we have to do it for the people that died for us to have the right to vote."

Combs and Jay-Z, whose real name is Shawn Carter, appeared before a crowd of about 800 at the Chester Robinson Athletic Center at Florida Memorial University for a "Last Chance for Change" rally Sunday afternoon.

Hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, music executive Kevin Liles and fellow recording artist Mary J. Blige also joined them at the get-out-the-vote effort for Democratic nominee Barack Obama.

"We stood in line to get the new Lil' Wayne CD," Liles said. "We stood in line to get a new pair of Jordans. We stood in line to get in here. So we ain't afraid of no lines."

The event was more of a campaign rally than hip-hop extravaganza. None of the artists actually performed on stage, instead using their time to stump for the Democratic nominee. A DJ played as the crowd waited for the group to arrive, and a gospel choir and college step teams also performed.

"We have been doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result," Blige said. "Please do something different. Barack Obama is a true example of something different. He's a true example of something our children can have in the future, what they can look at and say: 'Wow, we can really, really do something. We can really, really be something.'"

When an announcer asked if anyone in the crowd had already voted, several attendees threw their hands in the air, waved blue campaign signs and screamed.

More than 2 million of Florida's 11.2 million registered voters had already cast their ballots by Sunday morning, according to the state Division of Elections Web site. As of Saturday in Miami-Dade County, more than 300,000 had gone to the polls, according to county statistics. Early voting in the state ended Sunday.

Combs, who bounced on stage wearing an Obama T-shirt and sunglasses, has long worked to increase young voter turnout. Four years ago, he was part of the "Vote or Die" campaign and launched the nonpartisan group Citizen Change.

"I think we just really reinforced what they already knew," Jay-Z said after the event. "It energized them."

One attendee, 36-year-old Rebecca Vaughns, said Election Day would be especially sweet for her. The Miami resident, who was wearing a black Obama T-shirt and had a likeness of the nominee shaved in the back of her head, said she had been saving a giant chocolate "O" in her freezer for months, waiting for Nov. 4.

"It's not about black or white," Vaughn's said, "It's about the fact that this country is in a hole."

Fort Lauderdale resident Joyce Downing, 53, sat in the back of the stuffy arena before the rally started, wearing a red Obama T-shirt. Downing said she waited five hours a week ago to vote in an election she called an "awakening."

"Although I've voted as long as I've been eligible, this is the most exciting election I've been able to participate in," she said.

Monday, November 03, 2008 8:28:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    - Trackback
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LOS ANGELES – Sacha Baron Cohen went undercover as his alter ego Bruno on Sunday by crashing a rally in support of a ballot measure that would ban gay marriage in California.

The British comedian is working on a film based on the fictional character Bruno, a gay Austrian fashion reporter who conducted gag interviews on HBO's "Da Ali G Show."

Cohen, in disguise in a blond wig and preppy outfit, marched with demonstrators who support Proposition 8 while being trailed by cameras in a rally across from City Hall.

When photographers and reporters realized who he was and tried to approach the star, members of his film crew tried to shield him, and he was eventually whisked away in a van.

Cohen, who has made a career out of filming unwitting victims of his fake identities, also played a journalist in the hit movie "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan."

Monday, November 03, 2008 8:26:32 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Sunday, October 26, 2008

It all seems so easy now. At least as simple as sitting around reading the newspaper while you're on fire.

The 10th anniversary of "O" on Oct. 15 was marked with minimum fanfare. Performers found a cake in the backstage kitchenette, near a table where the show's two clowns played dominoes. Later, cast and crew members who were on board with Bellagio's water spectacle since day one assembled for a photo in the training gym.
 
A big party awaited them in The Bank nightclub four nights later (when they didn't have a show the next day). But a low-key celebration on the actual anniversary seemed right in keeping with the smooth-running machine that arguably stands as Cirque du Soleil's finest hour -- or at least that great moment in time when the Canadian company could do no wrong on the Strip.

"Really, it was the turning point for Cirque in a lot of ways," says Ray Wold, the one and only cast member who hadn't missed any of the 4,768 performances chalked up by the anniversary day. There is no understudy for the man who calmly sits in a chair and reads the paper while first his foot, then his whole body, goes up in flames.

Artistic director Luc Ouellette says whenever things begin to feel too routine, "I take a seat in the house. I sit down and I recharge just by feeling what the audience are feeling for the first time when they watch the show."

Cirque opened three more shows on the Strip after "O" and is now launching its sixth Las Vegas title, "Criss Angel -- Believe." The 10 years of "O" have seen director Franco Dragone leave the company to open (and close) a show with Celine Dion and mount a second water spectacle, "Le Reve."

But a cancellation line still forms at the "O" box office for many of the early shows. "They dress up," Ouellette says of the audience around him. "Maybe it's their first time or their second, but they know that they're here for something special."

He says his role for the past year is "mainly to be the guardian" and keep the cast motivated.

"I'm spoiled," he adds.

All the anxiety and adrenaline of 10 years ago is now a mile south at Luxor, where the creators of "Believe" can envy the fact that "O" opened in relative stealth. Internet access was still mostly dial-up then, the word "blog" hadn't been coined.

Opening the same day as Bellagio allowed show creators to benefit from delays in the larger project, with 45 test performances in front of casino employees before the first ticket was sold.

For 25 original cast members, including synchronized swimmer Katy Savoie, the real 10th anniversary was a year ago. The cast rehearsed in Montreal before arriving in Las Vegas in February 1998 with every one of its 95 performers (85 in each show) taking scuba certification tests in a chilly Lake Mead the next month.

Savoie remembers coming in the stage door to rehearse in the 1.5 million-gallon pool for months before seeing the casino beyond the construction walls.

On the first day, Belgian director Dragone sat the cast in the auditorium and demonstrated the hydraulic platforms, which changed the shape and depth of the 150-by-100-foot liquid stage, converting it to a flat surface in no time at all.

"I had seen a little bit of the world" as a competitive swimmer, says Savoie, who was 20 then. "But when we walked in the theater and I saw the size of the pool, it was ... overwhelming I would say is a good word."

By then, she already was accustomed to Dragone's unconventional methods. While still in Montreal, she remembers him producing a biblical painting of contorted bodies and telling the cast to "get in the water and try to find the essence of this."

"All of us were looking at each other. It was really theatrical what he was asking us, and our brains 10 years ago weren't ready."

Dragone would call for 15 swimmers to be on standby, and "four hours later we would still be standing there," she recalls. "Some of the process was long, but then at the end of the day, you could see the image that he was creating, what was created during that day. We didn't lose our time here. It was all for good reason."

Burning man Wold had it even worse. "I came here for creation and sat for about two months. Franco never really called on me," he recalls.

He wasn't complaining. Wold knew a prestige gig when he saw one after doing his burning man act in old-school circuses, "working in these mud shows and having to take care of the elephants."

Still, "I was a little dirty tramp clown. I didn't see how I fit into a beautiful image." Finally, the director hit upon the two minutes of surrealistic newspaper-reading, after the epiphany that a burning man will be the center of attention no matter what else is going on around him.

"I think that's the little twist that Cirque gives to things," Wold says. "It takes a genius to put all those elements together and make them blend. I was just awestruck by how (Dragone) did this.

"We'd offer something up as an entertainer and he'd say, 'I like that.' And the next thing you know, he took that and contorted it and changed it and blended it into something that was really unique and interesting and fantastic."

Over the years, more has changed behind the scenes than with anything the audience sees. Wardrobe supervisor Scott Clish has learned that overhead fans, not heated dryers, are better for drying the 4,400 costume pieces. Some last six months, others just six weeks.

"O" still runs on its original stage design, if not its original parts. All 12 of the 30-foot hydraulic lifts finally have been replaced. "Every time we build or replace something, we make it better," says technical director David Chabira.

Long-timers ponder the next 10 years. "Some people find a passion and they can do the same thing over and over again," Savoie says of her recent return after a maternity leave. "I found something that I love to do, and I think that helps me to do it every day."

"Of course you get bored," says Wold, who keeps his days busy running a party clown business. "But at the same time, you appreciate that this is as good as it gets."

Contact reporter Mike Weatherford at mweatherford@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0288.

source: lvrj.com

Sunday, October 26, 2008 1:29:50 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
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# Tuesday, October 21, 2008

**Exclusive**

Oprah Winfrey is offering to "produce" the half-hour Barack Obama advertisement set to air on Oct. 29, a top source tells the DRUDGE REPORT. The Daytime TV dynamo has even offered up her studio space in Chicago.

"She's been begging Obama to let her help," a source explaines.

O & O

It is not clear if the Obama campaign would pay Winfrey for any production services.

Requests for comment from Oprah went un-returned.

The Obama campaign strongly denies Oprah will be involved in the ad: Bill Richardson's former senior adviser, Mark Putnam is producing. Previously, Putnam produced commercials for Democratic campaigns in 44 states.

The TV finale is seen as a high risk move, designed to remove any remaining voter doubts on the first term senator.

CBS, NBC and FOX will air the info-commercial, with the start time of a potential World Series Game 6 being pushed back by eight minutes.

Mystery surrounds the production: Will it simply be Obama sitting at a desk reading TelePrompTer? Or will it incorporate multi-media elements, on the road footage, and sweeping historic images.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 10:17:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)  #    - Trackback
Categories: Entertainment | Politics
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