Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Rosie Perez Opens Up About Traumatic Childhood In Memoir

Rosie Perez has never been known to keep quiet, but the Puerto Rican actress was never truly outspoken about her traumatic past until now. Known for her spitfire personality and for breaking barriers for Latinas in the entertainment industry during the 1980s, Perez, 49, said in a recent interview with Fox News Latino that she is now ready to share her story in her new memoir, Handbook for an Unpredictable Life. While recent headlines have focused on what the Oscar-nominated star wrote concerning her infamous feud with Jennifer Lopez during their work together on "In Living Color," the Brooklyn-born actress says the book is truly about how she dealt with her difficult early years. For the record "I saw her and knew right away she had star quality and recommended her to Keenen Ivory Wayans. That's how she got her start" and I love her.
"The bigger issue of the book is surviving childhood," Perez told Fox. "The moral is really, how do you not allow your past to completely define you as an adult? And how do you not allow the emotional responses that served to protect you as a child [to] dictate your emotional responses today?" In her book, released in late February, Perez vividly describes the psychological and physical abuse she endured at the hands of her schizophrenic mother, as well as some of the nuns at the orphanage where her mother eventually left her. In time, Perez found success as a choreographer and actress, starring in such hits as "White Men Can't Jump" and "Do The Right Thing." Today, the Puerto Rican actress is also focused on her activism. She was chosen as part of President Barack Obama's Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS in 2010. She also heads the community organization Urban Arts Partnership, which promotes the arts in New York City classrooms. "We're always encouraging the kids to open up and tell us their stories, so they can get through the difficulties they face on a daily basis," Perez said about the moment she realized she needed to open up about her past. "One day one of the kids said, 'Well Ms. Perez, what's your story?' and I froze. I felt like such a hypocrite because I kept it a secret for so long. That's when my heart started opening up and I felt a little bit lighter. Then I started telling it bit by bit to other people, and when the book offer came my way, I was ready." Last month, Perez also spoke to Belinda Luscombe, Time magazine's editor-at-large, about Handbook and about how she felt when she was diagnosed as an adult with post-traumatic stress disorder caused by her experiences as a child. "First of all, being diagnosed sucked," Perez told Luscombe. "Initially it wasn't a relief. I wanted to believe that I was above all that had happened, all that had gone down. And when a licensed professional doctor said 'No, you have PTSD,' it was kind of like 'Oh my goodness, I'm human.' I didn't have that much control over my emotional response, the way I thought I did. And then there was this big sigh and it was like a weight was lifted off of me."

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

SON OF GOD: REVIEW

In the "Son of God" movie, a compilation of old footage from last year's History Channel "The Bible" series and previously unreleased scenes that were not included in the television show that opened in theaters on Friday, the film's producers and spokespeople, Mark Burnett and Roma Downey present their case for the third identity. The two hour and 18 minute film opened on Friday, Feb. 28, and stars Diogo Morgado as Jesus, Sebastian Knapp as John, Darwin Shaw as Peter and Amber Rose Revah as Mary Magdalene. Christopher Spencer directed "Son of God" and also co-wrote it along with Richard Bedser, Colin Swash and Nic Young. The bulk of Son of God's potency comes from exploring Christ's equal parts carnal and divine natures — the former of which comes much more strongly on a screen than through text. In the film, Jesus (Diogo Morgado) stumbles awkwardly into Peter's (Darwin Shaw) fishing boat, weeps when he sees his dead friend Lazarus and collapses to the dusty ground multiple times as he attempts to heave the cross to Golgotha. These small details reinforce the fact that although Jesus possessed unblemished morality, he was still physically constrained and subject to the limitations of a human body. The film also depicts a compassionate Christ, who finds himself moved by the plight of humans and who refuses to condescend to them. Jesus tenderly touches the face of the disgraced adulteress and forgives her sins, moments after challenging the hypocrisy of her would-be killers. He sends a lame man walking after morally restoring him as well. Before nourishing their souls, he attends to the physical needs of thousands who have gathered on a hill to hear him by feeding them. A challenge that the film had to wrestle with was depicting both the loving Jesus, and incorporating the deeply subversive nature, that God in human form assumed. The majority of first century Jews had two prevailing expectations for what identity the "Promised One" would assume. The religious leaders generally figured that God's representative would slap their backs for how faithfully and piously they had continued practicing, despite a 400 year lull in new revelation. For Jewish zealots fed up with toiling under a corrupt regime, they had little imagination to conceptualize a Christ that did not alleviate their frustration under the Empire. In his three year ministry, Christ dashed both hopes. He rolled his eyes at the Pharisaical do-gooderism that left little room for mercy and his non-violence preaching likely rankled those who had thought a superman would revolutionize their lives with a sword. But Jesus shied away from only offering verbal critiques — instead, he also spent dozens of hours with individuals who had been rendered irrelevant to any religious or political discussion: women, the uneducated, the mentally ill, and the contagiously sick. It is this side of Jesus that seems to receive less screen time in "Son of God." For the most part, Jesus' interactions with society's dirty, disgusting, and leprosy-ravaged are almost entirely omitted consequently understating the fact that Jesus possessed no notions of a Jewish kingship or establishing his own religion for its own sake: that he was there to find worthiness from and bestow worthiness to those society had deemed disposable. Composer Hans Zimmer is well-known for his stirring scores, and at times in "Son of God" the musical score is breathtaking. However, one quibble I felt slightly was at the build up to the crucifixion, where the music crescendos so frequently that, for me, it ultimately struggled to build tension and narrative. Some other small details also stood out for me; such as Jesus' perfectly combed mane also seemed at odds with the scruffy hair of his disciples and crowds. Christ may have been pure morally but it's unlikely his hair stayed as an unblemished as his conscience. For the film's challenges, only about half of it focuses on Christ's three years of ministry and through its extensive coverage of Pilate (Greg Hicks) and Caiaphas (Adrian Schiller) amorally struggling to remain relevant, and its incorporation of a political backstory in the Jesus-focused narrative, the latter portion of the film does a much stronger job showcasing a revolutionary "Son of God." From the onset, the filmmakers make it clear that the Jews viewed the Romans, understandably, as a menace. At one point they senselessly cause the death of a young boy when his father's broken cart clogs up a road. In another, Pilate's men ambush and massacre nearly 50 Jews. A frame in the opening of the movie, shows a hill with at least a dozen crosses bearing dying Jewish bodies. These scenes help drive home the point that Jesus' crucifixion, far from being unique, was consistent with how Romans dealt with the most extreme rabblerousing commoners — which Caiaphas accuses Jesus of being to Pilate. Further, they suggest that once again Jesus' incarnation confounded expectations of who God was. The Son of God eschewed glory and power to live a brief, poor, and often solitary human life before dying a brutal, lowly and common death at the hands of manipulative and unscrupulous religious and political leaders. This movie astonishes and leave you feeling good.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

Simon Cowell defends Miami holiday with baby

Music mogul Simon Cowell has hit back at critics who blasted him for taking baby Eric on holiday to Miami when he was only 10 days old. The X Factor boss and his girlfriend Lauren Silverman jetted to Florida for a beach holiday with Eric - who was born in New York on 14 February (14) - and his parenting skills were attacked by several critics. However, Cowell has now hit back, insisting he and Silverman are proud parents and would never put their son at risk. He tells Britain's Daily Mail newspaper, "I just want people to be clear that, yes, he has gone on a plane very early on, but the paediatrician in New York cleared him to travel. We would not have done it otherwise. We would never dream of putting him a risk. "I know there will be photos where Eric looks like he is in the sun, or photos where he looks like there's a dog in his face, or it looks like we aren't being great parents - but that isn't the case. We are taking great care of him all the time."

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Real Talk w/Bobby Hardy Wednesday August 18th at 7:00AM


My special guest on August 18 will be Mr Tony Jones of My girl 1 & 2 with (Dan Akroyde and Jamie Lee Curtis). We will also welcome Michelle Armenta a spokeswoman for working wardrobes. .Michelle Armenta remembers the three female volunteers who came into the room at the start of a Career Success program at Phoenix House in Santa Ana. "I thought to myself, these women are just going to get torn up," she said with a laugh. "But I listened to what they had to say, and what they had to say changed my life."

After her first arrest in 2005 on drug-related charges, Armenta was facing jail time. She was sentenced to spend six months in jail and six months in rehab.

During her stay at Phoenix House, she went through Working Wardrobe's career program. She received a job lead from Working Wardrobes and landed work in customer service.

"Working Wardrobes helps you with the whole process, even the simplest things, like setting up an e-mail address and a resume," she said. "The program just makes people look at themselves differently."

She credits Karen Lawson, a consultant for Clover Brands Marketing and a Working Wardrobes volunteer, for coaching her toward success.

"I still call her all the time to talk or for advice – even for small things like if my shirt will look good with something. I think that's how you can tell how effective this program is and how strong the bonds are that it creates," said Armenta, 40.

In 2007, she went back to Working Wardrobes to volunteer as a success coach. She now works as a sales representative: "I'm so grateful to Working Wardrobes, and I'm so happy I was able to bring this program to other women."

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