Month: March 2006 (Page 9 of 23)

Donna Martin graduates…to become skeezy tattoo model

Nothing says true love like a painstakingly rendered, full-tricep tattoo of your intended, staring vacantly in a black bra and turning your elbow into her tight little abs. Quintessential Daddy’s Girl (and erstwhile “90210” virgin) Tori Spelling, then, has finally found true love with unknown actor Dean McDermott, per the photo below:

toritatto

Ahhh, don’t it just make you feel all warm and fuzzy inside? Birds sing, spring flowers creep slowly up out of the ground…and Donna Martin has finally gotten over David Silver’s nasty betrayal in the back seat of that limo. As everyone knows, Hollywood love lasts forever…much longer than any tattoo.

Except, perhaps, Angelina Jolie’s “Billy Bob” tattoo. And Roseanne and Tom Arnold’s Roseanne and Tom tattoos. Oh, and Johnny Depp called, and said he had just two words for the budding lovebirds: “Wino Forever.”

The cook, apparently, does go down with the ship

This will likely be the first and last time that I use a piece from anyone associated with Fox News as a credible source, but it matches my personal opinion, dammit, so I’m running with it: Chef is not acting of his own accord. According to Roger Friedman:

Isaac Hayes did not quit “South Park.” My sources say that someone quit it for him.

I can tell you that Hayes is in no position to have quit anything. Contrary to news reports, the great writer, singer and musician suffered a stroke on Jan. 17. At the time it was said that he was hospitalized and suffering from exhaustion.

It’s also absolutely ridiculous to think that Hayes, who loved playing Chef on “South Park,” would suddenly turn against the show because they were poking fun at Scientology.

Last November, when the “Trapped in a Closet” episode of the comedy aired, I saw Hayes and spent time with him in Memphis for the annual Blues Ball.

If he hated the show so much, I doubt he would have performed his trademark hit song from the show, “Chocolate Salty Balls.” He tossed the song into the middle of one of his less salacious hits and got the whole audience in the Memphis Pyramid to sing along.

That would certainly explain an awful lot. It may also explain why Trey Parker and Matt Stone had their spokesperson spend more time attacking Scientology than attacking Chef. Their last press release was signed, “Trey Parker and Matt Stone, servants of the dark lord Xenu.” Even their comments against Hayes were phrased in a way to expose the intolerance of the church of Scientology rather than that of Hayes, so it would make sense that there is no bad blood between Parker/Stone and Hayes. If the “church” indeed took advantage of Hayes’ condition in order to cast a warning shot across the bow, then, well, they’re fucking idiots. Parker and Stone will hit them in ways that they won’t see coming until they’re lying on the ground, losing consciousness from loss of blood, while a mysterious figure looms over them with a silenced pistol to their temple, ready to give them the sweet, sweet merciful death they so desperately crave.

24, Hour 13: Hiding in Plain Sight, Part Deux

I would claim that I’m a prophet, but the truth is that until a couple weeks ago, which is a good two and a half years in TV time after I originally made my prediction, I had no right whatsoever to suspect Audrey Raines as a baddie. I picked her last season because Jack showed a weakness for bad girls in the past (Nina Meyers), and the situation involving the abduction of her father, then Secretary of Defense James Heller, provided decent cover for a bad girl.

That being said, I will now proudly refer to my post on February 20, where I said:

“The better bit was when the chip that Nathanson gave Jack to track the canisters was formatted with DOD software. That points a bony finger in Audrey’s direction. Or who knows, maybe even her father, former Secretary of Defense James Heller. I find this amusing as well, since Audrey was my dark horse bad guy pick last year. I was wrong then, of course, but how funny would it be if I were right in the end? Yeah, I know. It’s not gonna happen. “

Unless, of course, it does happen. Guess who gave up the schematics to whatever facility the Warlock is about to gas? Yep, our little Audrey, allegedly. Of the myriad of questions that remain, my first is: what is the building in the schematic? I’d say the L.A. subway, but everyone knows that no one rides the subway in Los Angeles. Who knows, maybe it’ll end where it started, at Ontario Airport. The irony is not lost on me that Jack has to interrogate yet another girlfriend, and of course he’s going to be harder on her than he was on Nina. Will he kill Audrey, only to find out that she’s innocent? Sure, why not? Jack doesn’t have enough on his conscience as it is.

My dark horse from this year, Wayne Palmer, showed up to give a “valuable piece of information” to Old Yeller. Palmer’s entrance, however, was intercepted thanks to the curfew instituted by “President Logan” (it was clearly orchestrated by Vice President Leland Palmer, who couldn’t help but grin like a Cheshire cat at Marty Logan once it had taken effect). VP Leland Palmer, of course, lets Wayne into the compound, and the second he did, I said, “Ambush.” Man, I hate it when I’m right like that. I’ll be curious to see if they whack both Wayne Palmer (who survived the first attempt on his life) and Old Yeller. If they do, I hope the producers know there will be hell to pay for it.

At the same time, you have to admire the producers’ willingness to get rid of anyone and everyone for the sake of exciting television, which is a rarity these days. President Palmer, Edgar, Tony, Michelle and Rudy Gamgee (how I didn’t think of this nickname first, I’ll never know, but all credit goes to my stepbrother Tony for that) are dead. Audrey is fingered as a spy. Kim is under the spell of a really bad psychiatrist. How much more upside down can you turn Jack’s life from what it was a mere 13 hours ago?

Anyway, Desmond (“Lost” fans will get that reference) shows up as a Ralph Fiennes-circa-“Strange Days” English spy working for the Germans who’s also trying to bring in our information broker femme fatale. Jack makes a Faustian deal to get the girl, only to temporarily screw the agent, something that will surely come back to haunt him during the off week when Marty Logan’s poker face doesn’t come back to haunt her when the Suvarovs exact their revenge for not telling them they were about to be killed. So we have a lead – an internal one, no less – so my big questions at this point are:

– Who knew that Jack was still alive? All along, the plot has survived on the understanding that someone else outside of Tony, Michelle and Chloe knew that Jack was still alive. Who the hell was it? There are a ton of people who could have known – Bill, Audrey, Edgar, Wayne, Old Yeller, Logan – but how many of them would have set today’s events into motion? Leland Palmer may look like a villain, but it would be a total cheat if they write up some heretofore imaginary background involving him with any of the above characters. Audrey, however, makes much more sense. Jack tortured her husband Paul, who wound up dying in order to save Jack’s life. You wanna talk about “Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned”? It doesn’t come any more gift-wrapped than Audrey. She had the means, and she had the motive.

– Why is VP Leland Palmer so eager to see Wayne Palmer sleeping with the fishes? What could Wayne Palmer possibly have to justify using a government strike force to take out a former member of a presidential cabinet? Sounds like treason, doesn’t it? But then again, if the scenes of next week’s episode are any indication, it is Robocop that is most curious to see Wayne Palmer sleeping with fishes. Strange bedfellows, indeed, Leland Palmer and Robocop.

Then again, I might know exactly why everyone in the know – President Buck Buck Brawwwwk, of course, hasn’t a fucking clue what is going on – wants Wayne Palmer on ice. In my second blog from this year, I said:

“Look for a secret tape of President Palmer to surface midseason, revealing clues to the day’s events.”

Perhaps that is what Wayne wanted to deliver to Old Yeller, since he didn’t know that Jack Bauer was alive. And yes, I know that saying that invalidates my dark horse theory of this year. But knowing my predictions, that means that Wayne will be next year’s baddie. You heard it here first.

Trailer Hitch: “Mission: Impossible III,” “Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector”

“Mission: Impossible III”
Everyone’s favorite secret adoptee father-to-be still hasn’t made a good “M:I” movie yet — five words: John Woo, slo-mo doves — but this one, at least on paper, looks mighty fine. The casting of Philip Seymour Hoffman couldn’t be more timely, and the supporting cast is loaded with talent, from Ving Rhames and Laurence Fishburne to Keri Russell and Sasha Alexander (notice there are different types of “talent” we’re talking about here). Even Greg “Weiss” Grunberg, longtime standby of writer/director J.J. Abrams, is involved. And the bits where Hoffman is telling Cruise what he will do to his loved ones, is more sinister than the last two “M:I” movies combined.

But, if we’ve learned anything, it is to not go into any “M:I” movie with any expectations whatsoever, so take this trailer with a mound of salt.

Windows Media Player
Real
Quicktime

“Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector”
If these three scenes don’t tell you why this movie isn’t being screened for critics, nothing else does. Only the first scene is remotely redeemable, and that’s because it features the divine Lisa Lampa-freaking-hoo-ha as the MOTHER of Larry’s love interest (a relationship which, for the record, ranks as the impossible 16/1 upset on Eli Cash’s scale). The very fact that one of them is called Later Bathroom Moment, implying that there’s an Earlier Bathroom Moment, tells me all I need to know.

Trailer #1: Meeting Mom
Trailer #2: LaterBathroom Moment
Trailer #3: Backup Plan

A new reason to love summer

Dreading the summer TV doldrums? Have no fear: NBC is set to give you a fun-filled fix of 10 brand-new episodes of “The Office” this summer.

What’s the catch? Well, technically, they’re webisodes, not episodes, and can only be seen at NBC.com. Also, perennial favorite cast members Steve Carell, John Krasinski, and Jenna Fischer will not appear, as the webisodes’ storyline focuses on the accounting department’s hunt for $3,000 in missing company cash (and Steve, John & Jenna will be off making movies). However, resident basket case Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson), as well as several other supporting cast members will also appear to assist (or, in Dwight’s case, more likely impede) the accounting team in their quest.

Will these episodes be just as fully enjoyable as a standard “Office” half-hour, sans the poignant Jim-Pam-Roy love triangle and the self-absorbed antics of one Michael Scott? Probably not. Will they nonetheless be a vast improvement over “Big Brother 7,” “America’s Hottest Grandmas,” and other typical summer TV fare? Hell, yes.

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