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20:30:01 02/07/12
Jennifer Aniston in InStyle March 2012
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:30:01 02/07/12
Jennifer Aniston in InStyle March 2012
PHOTOS: The Wanderlust star poses for the March cover of In Style magazine and spills on the constant love triangle rumors about her, Brad and Angelina. Plus, the scoop on Justin Theroux! JENNIFER ANISTON IS OPENING UP ABOUT HER LOVE LIFE, AND FINALLY CALLING OUT THOSE LOVE TRIANGLE TABLOID RUMORS THAT JUST WON'T GO AWAY... WHAT'S THE MOST ANNOYING MISCONCEPTION ABOUT JENNIFER ANISTON? "The triangle with my ex-husband," SHE TELLS THE MARCH ISSUE OF INSTYLE. "And that there's a feud there. It's constant." AGREED... AFTER ALMOST SEVEN YEARS SINCE THEIR SPLIT, TABS ARE STILL TRYING TO STIR UP DRAMA BETWEEN JEN, BRAD AND ANGELINA..."It's a story headline that won't go away," SHE ADDS, "but it's a money thing -- [people make money off] a story that has nothing to do with reality." NOT THAT SHE'S ABOVE GETTING A DIG IN HERSELF... WHEN THE MAG ASKED HER ABOUT HER LATEST LOVE, JUSTIN THEROUX, SHE SAID: "Having experienced everything you don't want in a partner over time, it starts to narrow down what you actually do want. As I get older I realize what qualities are important in love and what suits me. And what I won't settle for." "Wrap your fingers around the base of it, work your way down to the shaft of it...then flick the tip...what... flick the tip." THE WANDERLUST CO-STARS MET ON THE SET, AND HAVE BEEN PRETTY MUCH GLUED AT THE HIP EVER SINCE...BUT DON'T SAY THEY DRESS ALIKE... JEN ADDS, "First of all, he has great style%mdashit's very specific, and it has been his style forever ... From: CelebTV Views: 448 7 ratings Time: 01:34 More in Entertainment
0 Views
20:30:01 02/07/12
Jennifer Aniston in InStyle March 2012
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:30:01 02/07/12
Jennifer Aniston in InStyle March 2012
PHOTOS: The Wanderlust star poses for the March cover of In Style magazine and spills on the constant love triangle rumors about her, Brad and Angelina. Plus, the scoop on Justin Theroux! JENNIFER ANISTON IS OPENING UP ABOUT HER LOVE LIFE, AND FINALLY CALLING OUT THOSE LOVE TRIANGLE TABLOID RUMORS THAT JUST WON'T GO AWAY... WHAT'S THE MOST ANNOYING MISCONCEPTION ABOUT JENNIFER ANISTON? "The triangle with my ex-husband," SHE TELLS THE MARCH ISSUE OF INSTYLE. "And that there's a feud there. It's constant." AGREED... AFTER ALMOST SEVEN YEARS SINCE THEIR SPLIT, TABS ARE STILL TRYING TO STIR UP DRAMA BETWEEN JEN, BRAD AND ANGELINA..."It's a story headline that won't go away," SHE ADDS, "but it's a money thing -- [people make money off] a story that has nothing to do with reality." NOT THAT SHE'S ABOVE GETTING A DIG IN HERSELF... WHEN THE MAG ASKED HER ABOUT HER LATEST LOVE, JUSTIN THEROUX, SHE SAID: "Having experienced everything you don't want in a partner over time, it starts to narrow down what you actually do want. As I get older I realize what qualities are important in love and what suits me. And what I won't settle for." "Wrap your fingers around the base of it, work your way down to the shaft of it...then flick the tip...what... flick the tip." THE WANDERLUST CO-STARS MET ON THE SET, AND HAVE BEEN PRETTY MUCH GLUED AT THE HIP EVER SINCE...BUT DON'T SAY THEY DRESS ALIKE... JEN ADDS, "First of all, he has great style%mdashit's very specific, and it has been his style forever ... From: CelebTV Views: 448 7 ratings Time: 01:34 More in Entertainment
19 Views
19:17:14 06/25/11
MALIN AKERMAN at "Girl Walks Into A Bar" Premiere
[LESS INFO] 19 VIEWS | ADDED 19:17:14 06/25/11
"Maximo TV - License this clip http://www.maximotv.com http://www.youtube.com/maximotv MALIN AKERMAN (Inferno: A Linda Lovelace Story, Wanderlust, Elektra Luxx) at ""Girl Walks Into A Bar"" Premiere red carpet arrivals at The Arclight Hollywood in Los Angeles, California USA - Interview by Gabrielle Loren Zachary Quinto stars as a dentist who teams up with a feisty would-be assassin (Carla Gugino) to put the final touches on the plan to kill his wife. Once he makes a play for the assassin's payment, he unknowingly sets off a chain of events that fuels a cross-town journey through the many lounges, bars, strip clubs and the occasional nudist ping pong club scattered across Los Angeles. Along the way, we are introduced to a series of idiosyncratic characters, from pickpocket and gangsters ( Aaron Tveit, Danny DeVito) to exotic dancers (Emmanuelle Chriqui, Alexis Bledel), from ex-cons (Robert Forster) to cops (Josh Hartnett, Gil Bellows), with the odd hatcheck girl (Rosario Dawson) and bartender (Amber Valletta) thrown in for good measure. ""Girl Walks Into A Bar"" is a feature-length film that follows a series of characters in interlocking stories taking place in ten different bars during the course of one evening in Los Angeles. By turns funny and heartbreaking, this sharp-witted comedy is written and directed by Sebastian Gutierrez (""Women in Trouble,"" ""Elektra Luxx"") and is produced by Steve Bing (""The Polar Express,"" ""Shine A Light""), Richard Rosenblatt and Gutierrez. View the Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/shangrila ***This footage is available for licensing*** The viewing of this clip by website visitors is only permissible for personal use; copying, commercial use, distribution, broadcast, download, additional use or transfer is expressly prohibited. Contact us for more information at maximotv.com for proper clearance.
10 Views
23:34:35 06/06/11
The One Am Radio Live in Studio B - Part 1 - What You Gave Away
[LESS INFO] 10 VIEWS | ADDED 23:34:35 06/06/11
Dangerbird recording artists The One Am Radio perform live in Studio B of Mevio in San Francisco This is Part 1. For the complete performance CLICK HERE
Official Site Facebook Twitter MySpace
The One AM Radio is a trio based in Los Angeles, where the sun hasn’t completely thawed their New England roots. They make music about the feeling you get while driving home, fast, late at night, through half-empty streets.
The project began in New England, where Hrishikesh Hirway was studying design and photography at Yale. With a borrowed guitar, a 4-track, and a drum machine, he made cassettes for his friends and his sister to fall asleep to—instrumental lullabies mixed with staticky murmurs of talk radio.
Hirway started writing lyrics and singing over his music, and began performing, using what he’d written on the label on the first cassette — “The One AM Radio” — as a moniker.
Ted Leo gave Hrishikesh his real start and his first release, after the two played a show together, inviting him to come record in Boston at Radium City, Ted’s home recording studio. Those recordings were released as a split 7-inch with Ted Leo and the Pharmacists.
Because of Hrishikesh’s musical roots, The One AM Radio became an unlikely part of the DIY hardcore scene, playing and touring alongside screamy punk bands in sweaty basements. The homemade recordings were released in the form of EPs and 7”s on a variety of hardcore labels, as well as Hirway’s own DIY imprint, Translucence .
By the time 2004’s A Name Writ In Water was released, people outside of the hardcore community had started to take notice. Pitchfork reviewed the album glowingly, giving it an 8.1 rating, noting “Hirway’s prose is peppered with imagistic bits of landscape. His compositions simply feel colossal…the maps he draws are beautiful.” Time Out New York deemed it one of the top ten albums of the year, and called the “dream mix of vocals, guitars, synths, violins, and ambient beats…both lush and thoughtful.”
That year, between touring and working odd jobs and freelancing as a designer, Hirway began a nomadic lifestyle, criss-crossing the country in his car, with his belongings limited to what could fit in his trunk. He eventually left the US to spend time in his parents’ home country of India, and began writing and recording what would become the album This Too Will Pass while living in Mumbai.
Hirway found himself back in Los Angeles, where he had once lived briefly, but long enough to fall in and collaborate with the likes of Daedelus and the dublab crew, the online radio collective at the heart of the LA experimental electronic scene. This time, shedding the wanderlust that had guided him for so long, he decided to try and make the city his home.
There, he made the acquaintance of the folks at Dangerbird Records, who signed him to release This Too Will Pass .
Los Angeles proved to be a fertile and fortuitous home base for Hirway, as a place where he could continue his unique aesthetic among a collection of luminaries who were like-minded if not exactly like-sounding. He remixed tracks for Jimmy Tamborello (of Dntel and the Postal Service) and LA beat-scene breakout star Baths, who had been a longtime fan of The One AM Radio. He produced two albums for labelmates Eulogies, and played shows with folks like Juana Molina, El Perro Del Mar, and Damien Jurado when they came through town.
Hrishikesh started making Heaven Is Attached by a Slender Thread during sleepless nights. Tony Hoffer, who has produced albums for Beck, Phoenix, Belle and Sebastian, and Air, ended up hearing demos of some of the early songs and reached out to get involved with the recording. Hoffer took an the role of an advisor, and Hirway would send him his hand-crafted organic electronic songs. Hoffer eventually mixed the album. Baths and his fellow anticon labelmate alias contributed as well, to the songs “Ticking Heart” and “Weathering (The News),” respectively. Hirway’s new bandmates, Fontaine Cole and Scott Leahy, added to the recordings, as well as Daniel Hart, the violinist for St Vincent.
For Hirway, the new LP is about living on the fumes of dreams and hopes, which also happen to be what the plastic city of Los Angeles is built on, and what it is constantly confirming—and betraying. At one point, Hrishikesh’s idea was to make a dance record, and now, he admits, that’s not really how it turned out. But the album does make you want to move, to run, to get in the car and drive fast through the empty city in the middle of the night — to remember how tenuous the hold is on all the things you have, and want, and long for.
11 Views
23:10:03 06/06/11
The One Am Radio - Live in Studio B - Part 2- Sunlight
[LESS INFO] 11 VIEWS | ADDED 23:10:03 06/06/11
Dangerbird recording artists The One Am Radio perform live in Studio B of Mevio in San Francisco This is Part 2. For the complete performance CLICK HERE
Official Site Facebook Twitter MySpace
The One AM Radio is a trio based in Los Angeles, where the sun hasn’t completely thawed their New England roots. They make music about the feeling you get while driving home, fast, late at night, through half-empty streets.
The project began in New England, where Hrishikesh Hirway was studying design and photography at Yale. With a borrowed guitar, a 4-track, and a drum machine, he made cassettes for his friends and his sister to fall asleep to—instrumental lullabies mixed with staticky murmurs of talk radio.
Hirway started writing lyrics and singing over his music, and began performing, using what he’d written on the label on the first cassette — “The One AM Radio” — as a moniker.
Ted Leo gave Hrishikesh his real start and his first release, after the two played a show together, inviting him to come record in Boston at Radium City, Ted’s home recording studio. Those recordings were released as a split 7-inch with Ted Leo and the Pharmacists.
Because of Hrishikesh’s musical roots, The One AM Radio became an unlikely part of the DIY hardcore scene, playing and touring alongside screamy punk bands in sweaty basements. The homemade recordings were released in the form of EPs and 7”s on a variety of hardcore labels, as well as Hirway’s own DIY imprint, Translucence .
By the time 2004’s A Name Writ In Water was released, people outside of the hardcore community had started to take notice. Pitchfork reviewed the album glowingly, giving it an 8.1 rating, noting “Hirway’s prose is peppered with imagistic bits of landscape. His compositions simply feel colossal…the maps he draws are beautiful.” Time Out New York deemed it one of the top ten albums of the year, and called the “dream mix of vocals, guitars, synths, violins, and ambient beats…both lush and thoughtful.”
That year, between touring and working odd jobs and freelancing as a designer, Hirway began a nomadic lifestyle, criss-crossing the country in his car, with his belongings limited to what could fit in his trunk. He eventually left the US to spend time in his parents’ home country of India, and began writing and recording what would become the album This Too Will Pass while living in Mumbai.
Hirway found himself back in Los Angeles, where he had once lived briefly, but long enough to fall in and collaborate with the likes of Daedelus and the dublab crew, the online radio collective at the heart of the LA experimental electronic scene. This time, shedding the wanderlust that had guided him for so long, he decided to try and make the city his home.
There, he made the acquaintance of the folks at Dangerbird Records, who signed him to release This Too Will Pass .
Los Angeles proved to be a fertile and fortuitous home base for Hirway, as a place where he could continue his unique aesthetic among a collection of luminaries who were like-minded if not exactly like-sounding. He remixed tracks for Jimmy Tamborello (of Dntel and the Postal Service) and LA beat-scene breakout star Baths, who had been a longtime fan of The One AM Radio. He produced two albums for labelmates Eulogies, and played shows with folks like Juana Molina, El Perro Del Mar, and Damien Jurado when they came through town.
Hrishikesh started making Heaven Is Attached by a Slender Thread during sleepless nights. Tony Hoffer, who has produced albums for Beck, Phoenix, Belle and Sebastian, and Air, ended up hearing demos of some of the early songs and reached out to get involved with the recording. Hoffer took an the role of an advisor, and Hirway would send him his hand-crafted organic electronic songs. Hoffer eventually mixed the album. Baths and his fellow anticon labelmate alias contributed as well, to the songs “Ticking Heart” and “Weathering (The News),” respectively. Hirway’s new bandmates, Fontaine Cole and Scott Leahy, added to the recordings, as well as Daniel Hart, the violinist for St Vincent.
For Hirway, the new LP is about living on the fumes of dreams and hopes, which also happen to be what the plastic city of Los Angeles is built on, and what it is constantly confirming—and betraying. At one point, Hrishikesh’s idea was to make a dance record, and now, he admits, that’s not really how it turned out. But the album does make you want to move, to run, to get in the car and drive fast through the empty city in the middle of the night — to remember how tenuous the hold is on all the things you have, and want, and long for.
11 Views
22:57:56 06/06/11
The One Am Radio - Live in Studio B
[LESS INFO] 11 VIEWS | ADDED 22:57:56 06/06/11
Dangerbird recording artists The One Am Radio perform live in Studio B of Mevio in San Francisco Official Site Facebook Twitter MySpace
The One AM Radio is a trio based in Los Angeles, where the sun hasn’t completely thawed their New England roots. They make music about the feeling you get while driving home, fast, late at night, through half-empty streets.
The project began in New England, where Hrishikesh Hirway was studying design and photography at Yale. With a borrowed guitar, a 4-track, and a drum machine, he made cassettes for his friends and his sister to fall asleep to—instrumental lullabies mixed with staticky murmurs of talk radio.
Hirway started writing lyrics and singing over his music, and began performing, using what he’d written on the label on the first cassette — “The One AM Radio” — as a moniker.
Ted Leo gave Hrishikesh his real start and his first release, after the two played a show together, inviting him to come record in Boston at Radium City, Ted’s home recording studio. Those recordings were released as a split 7-inch with Ted Leo and the Pharmacists.
Because of Hrishikesh’s musical roots, The One AM Radio became an unlikely part of the DIY hardcore scene, playing and touring alongside screamy punk bands in sweaty basements. The homemade recordings were released in the form of EPs and 7”s on a variety of hardcore labels, as well as Hirway’s own DIY imprint, Translucence .
By the time 2004’s A Name Writ In Water was released, people outside of the hardcore community had started to take notice. Pitchfork reviewed the album glowingly, giving it an 8.1 rating, noting “Hirway’s prose is peppered with imagistic bits of landscape. His compositions simply feel colossal…the maps he draws are beautiful.” Time Out New York deemed it one of the top ten albums of the year, and called the “dream mix of vocals, guitars, synths, violins, and ambient beats…both lush and thoughtful.”
That year, between touring and working odd jobs and freelancing as a designer, Hirway began a nomadic lifestyle, criss-crossing the country in his car, with his belongings limited to what could fit in his trunk. He eventually left the US to spend time in his parents’ home country of India, and began writing and recording what would become the album This Too Will Pass while living in Mumbai.
Hirway found himself back in Los Angeles, where he had once lived briefly, but long enough to fall in and collaborate with the likes of Daedelus and the dublab crew, the online radio collective at the heart of the LA experimental electronic scene. This time, shedding the wanderlust that had guided him for so long, he decided to try and make the city his home.
There, he made the acquaintance of the folks at Dangerbird Records, who signed him to release This Too Will Pass .
Los Angeles proved to be a fertile and fortuitous home base for Hirway, as a place where he could continue his unique aesthetic among a collection of luminaries who were like-minded if not exactly like-sounding. He remixed tracks for Jimmy Tamborello (of Dntel and the Postal Service) and LA beat-scene breakout star Baths, who had been a longtime fan of The One AM Radio. He produced two albums for labelmates Eulogies, and played shows with folks like Juana Molina, El Perro Del Mar, and Damien Jurado when they came through town.
Hrishikesh started making Heaven Is Attached by a Slender Thread during sleepless nights. Tony Hoffer, who has produced albums for Beck, Phoenix, Belle and Sebastian, and Air, ended up hearing demos of some of the early songs and reached out to get involved with the recording. Hoffer took an the role of an advisor, and Hirway would send him his hand-crafted organic electronic songs. Hoffer eventually mixed the album. Baths and his fellow anticon labelmate alias contributed as well, to the songs “Ticking Heart” and “Weathering (The News),” respectively. Hirway’s new bandmates, Fontaine Cole and Scott Leahy, added to the recordings, as well as Daniel Hart, the violinist for St Vincent.
For Hirway, the new LP is about living on the fumes of dreams and hopes, which also happen to be what the plastic city of Los Angeles is built on, and what it is constantly confirming—and betraying. At one point, Hrishikesh’s idea was to make a dance record, and now, he admits, that’s not really how it turned out. But the album does make you want to move, to run, to get in the car and drive fast through the empty city in the middle of the night — to remember how tenuous the hold is on all the things you have, and want, and long for.


