Friday, August 26, 2011

Kathy Griffin Takes Cues From Jim Carrey, Posts Ode To Attacking Young Boys

La, Calif. -- Kathy Griffin has had a signal from Jim Carreys ode to Emma Stone, and published her very own love proclamation to the favourite Canadian teen singing sensation around Attacking Young Boys. I had been so inspired by comic giant Jim Carey that Ive made the decision to pledge my love, making this a note for Attacking Young Boys, Kathy stated as she opened up her clip. Attacking Young Boys, I really want you to understand youre completely beautiful, despite individuals like lesbian bangs, that's no diss towards the LGBT community, Kathy stated, estimating Jims own proclamation for Emma and adlibbing a couple of extra comedy bits. Youre wise and kind hearted Thats kind of a belief, however, you appear nice, basically could I'd marry you, Oh, thats really not the case.. Its untidy We'd go steady, she added. Like Jims video, Kathys is increased close, inside a confessional-style camera. Click The Link to look at Kathys ode towards the Biebs. Copyright 2011 by NBC Universal, Corporation. All privileges reserved.These components might not be released, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Not Remarkably, Yoda Is Going To Be Computer-Produced about the Phantom Menace Blu-ray

Since you don’t own The Exorcist on enough platforms, Lucasfilm is delivering the entire saga on Blu-ray in September. The huge and anticipated release will feature lots of features — including Original Trilogy erased moments! — and several new stuff. Just like a computer-produced version of Yoda to exchange the puppet utilized in The Phantom Menace . Click through for any comparison. To begin with, The Phantom Menace is really as bad while you remember, no? Egad! Mike Lloyd much!? That low-hanging fruit snapped up and squashed, let’s give credit where credit arrives: Puppet Yoda looks more fake than normal in Menace, encircled by the rest of the computer-produced moments his CG alternative feels in some way more real — or at best complementary to Lucas’s overwhelming digital aesthetic. As lengthy because the bearded one doesn’t touch OG Yoda, we’re awesome. The Exorcist: The Entire Saga hits Blu-ray on Sept. 16. [via Slashfilm]

Introducing ENTV, the Entertainment Minute From the Movieline Mothership

The labs at Movieline’s parent company PMC are always developing cool and creative ways to improve their comprehensive entertainment-media machine, and so it should come as no surprise that the TV and streaming video realms would receive a visit sooner or later. Thus ENTV, or Entertainment News Television, a new, regularly updated initiative featuring stories from around the PMC network — sites like Deadline, TVLine, Hollywood Life and, of course, this very site as well. Coolest of all? We’re going to cable! PMC’s new partners at the ION Network will include ENTV interludes throughout its broadcast schedule, meaning that host Chelsea Cannell and all the news that’s fit to fuel our family of Web sites will now be regular viewing material for a nationwide television audience. (ION reached nearly 100 million homes in the U.S.) It will also have a permanent home in our right sidebar, where it takes up residence today. What does it look like? What can you expect? Try a sample, and ask for future episodes in the cable package/taxicab TV display/airplane seat-back screen nearest you! We’re everywhere! Your browser does not support iframes.

TV Ratings: 'America's Got Talent' Wins Against Its Competition

NBC"America's Got Talent" NBC's America's Got Talent was Tuesday's No. 1 destination. Talent (11.6 million total viewers, 3.1 rating in adults 18-49 demographic) was the top-rated program in its time period against its broadcast competitors in all key demos, including males 18-49, females 18-49 and the 18-34 categories. The summer talent series was also the most-watched program of the night, easily beating out its closest competitor, a NCIS rerun on CBS at 8 p.m. Week-to-week, Talent improved 11 percent in the ad-coveted 18-49 demo and is up 12 percent in total viewers. Though It's Worth What? (4.3 million, 1.1) was steady in its ratings performance compared to the previous week, it was Talent that helped NBC take the nightly victory in total viewers (9.2 million) and the demo (2.4). ABC and CBS tied for second, averaging a 1.5 rating, with CBS airing repeats of its NCIS franchise. ABC's Take the Money & Run (4.1 million, 1.6) and Combat Hospital (3.5 million, 1.0) were solid. Fox and the CW aired reruns. TV Ratings NBC America's Got Talent

Im Pregnant Using Their Baby

Documentary telling the storyline of three youthful ladies who have each made the decision to provide a childless couple the best gift an infant that belongs to them. Twenty-two-year-old Louise has her hands full together with her own boy, but she's going to conceive a couple of who've wanted an infant for 13 years. Twenty-three-year-old Lyndsay continues to be so moved with a other people have a problem with cancer that they has made the decision to hold an infant on her. And aged just twenty, Shannon is simply too youthful to become a surrogate within the United kingdom however in two days she'll be 21, and she or he has already been about the search on her ideal couple. Louise, Lyndsay and Shannon are among a small amount of very youthful ladies who are registering to become surrogate mums for couples they've only met. But, because they uncover, a realistic look at giving someone an infant isn't just as they imagined it may be.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Jennifer Garner, Film Clip Expecting Baby No. 3

Jennifer Garner and Film Clip Jennifer Garner and Film Clip expect their third child, they confirmed towards the Connected Press.The pair is "thrilled" concerning the approaching addition, who'll join large siblings Purple, 5, and Seraphina, 2.When are you able to next catch Jennifer Garner on television, online or when needed? Add her for your Watchlist and you will know for sureGarner and Affleck, both 39, happen to be married for six years.She's presently filming the Disney movie The Odd Existence of Timothy Eco-friendly, while Affleck is planning to direct his third feature, Argo, concerning the 1979 Tehran hostage crisis.

Tweets Rate ABC, CW Tops for Fall

When the twittering classes have say within the matter, this fall will probably be a blockbuster for ABC and also the CW. Even though fall might not alleviate the suffering at NBC, the Peacock seems to achieve the greatest new scripted series on its hands within the midseason entry, "Smash."According to an alternative survey of social networking behavior from Networked Experience, ABC's slate of fall dramas is stirring in the most positive buzz on Twitter, Facebook, along with other social networks.7 from the eight new dramas set to debut on ABC throughout the 2011-12 season have elicited positive feedback on various onlinefora, such as the period piece "Pan Am," the spun-sugar "Charlie's Angels" reboot, and "Not so long ago," a curious hybrid of story book and procedural. From the new ABC dramas, "Not so long ago" has gained probably the most praise (23 percent). When measured by the amount of impressions (a catchall for the number of occasions each show continues to be pointed out within the social networking sphere), the sudsy "Good Christian Belles" wins out, with 674,143. A minimum of a number of that tally could be lined as much as the furor within the show's original, ill-advised title, "Good Christian Bitches."Just the midseason Ashley Judd/Sean Bean thriller "Missing" unsuccessful to join up, largely because ABC has yet release a the official trailer for that show. The Ten-episode arc is presently being shot in Prague.If ABC's drama slate looks solid, its comedy choices are a little of the clean. First, what's promising: "Apartment 23"formerly referred to as "Don't Trust the Bitch in Apt. 23" (oh, ABC!)has among the greatest sentiment scores (26 %), and also the pilot is truly funny. Purchasers attending ABC's May upfront presentation appeared particularly tickled to determine former "Dawson's Creek" fiveheader, heartthrobJames Van Der Beek go ahead and take piss from themself with what comes down to a season-lengthy cameo. But next, it's all regulated downhill.Boasting the only worst reception associated with a new series was the cumbersome "Bosom Pals" rehash "Arrange It.Inch Among nine shows to get negative rankings from prospective audiences, the mix-dressing comedy's sentiment score was -15 %.As you might imagine, the CW's youthful audience could be depended upon to create a large amount of online chatter. Sarah Michelle Gellar makes her go back to network TV in "Ringer," a dark mystery which has "Buffy" fans champing in the bit. Some 1.66 million impressions have popped up round the new show, that has gained the 2nd-greatest sentiment rating, at 28 percent.Kevin Williamson's witchy drama "The Key Circle" also made up alluring amounts based on Networked Experience, the show notched a 26 % sentiment rating and 728,412 impressions. Rachel Bilson might not be entirely credible like a recently minted physician who moves from New You are able to towards the stays, but "Hart of Dixie" continues to be trending fairly well, tying for twelfth place by having an 11 percent sentiment rating.At Fox, Simon Cowell's approaching competition series "The X Factor" is by far probably the most talked about new show about the docket, producing 8.22 million impressions. (By means of comparison, no. 2 show, NBC's "Smash," continues to be the subject of two.two million online conversations.)As the bloviating Brit has people speaking, "The X Factor" finished in the center of those about the sentiment front (9 %). But purchasers love the show along with other compared to National football league, "Factor" was among the couple of must-buys within the 2011-12 upfront.Not too Networked Experience is always attempting to assess how each show will fare within the fall. "Monitoring this online data for the agency clients enables us to supply unique experience into those who watch television,Inch stated Networked Experience Boss Serta Neely. "Fans of 'Glee' might not always visit [Fox's] Glee.com site. They're going with other places, once we can easily see from monitoring the information . . . as well as in making buys on these digital qualities, entrepreneurs can achieve that 'Glee' audience without needing to pay a broadcast CPM."Last season, a 30-second just right "Glee" cost roughly $275,000. "It comes down to making your TV dollars continue to work harder by utilizing digital media like a natural extension of TV," Neely stated. "Knowing in which the viewer stays their time spent online keeps you competitive. If you cannot obtain the inventory you would like [on linear TV], you are able to still achieve that audience elsewhere. It's a method to obtain a TV audience without purchasing TV."Other trending Fox series would be the Zooey Deschanel vehicle "New Girl," the Monday evening dino drama "Terra Nova," and Qq Abrams' Alcatraz.Strangely enough, while NBC supports the boasting privileges which are more anticipated drama ("Awake" capped brand new series having a 38 percent sentiment rating) and comedy ("Up Through The Night," 27 percent), the rest of its fall selection seems full of underachievers. Comedienne Whitney Cummings is really a polarizing personalitytype "Whitney Cummings is" into Google's search area and also the first prompts to look are ". . . not funny," ". . . hot" and ". . . is terrible"and her self-entitled sitcom has gained low marks in the vox populi. (Cummings' standup act is very funny regrettably, the show is blighted with a particularly irritating laugh track.)"Playboy Club" is the topic of much speculation, as numerous bloggers feel it is a better fit for cable. The pilot is going through a large amount of overhauling, as NBC is reshooting nearly another from the footage to be able to speed the experience.The time piece can also be taking its protuberances in the ever-vigilant Parents Television Council, which, despite not getting tested the pilot, has denounced the show to be in breach of broadcast decency laws and regulations. (The series opener is really rather tame consistent with the uniforms worn through the '60s-era Playboy Rabbits, there is no more skin displayed than you'd get in an average episode of Baywatch.)Still, NBC comes with an ace up its sleeve in "Smash," the Broadway Baby musical that appears determined to make Katharine McPhee a significant TV star. NBC programming chief Bob Greenblatt introduced "Smash" with him from Showtime, with its high sentiment (22 percent) and impressions (2.two million), the series is possibly probably the most anticipated new scripted effort from the coming season.Lastly, while CBS is just preparing a number of new series, the network boasts the 3rd most-praised comedy in "2 Broke Women" and also the No. 8 drama ("Person of great interestInch). CBS entertainment leader Nina Tassler told media purchasers "2 Broke Women"was the greatest-testing pilot the network had seen.Networked Experience counts numerous major media agencies among its customers, and Starcom MediaVest is really a partner. Together with helping clients uncover online options to TV buys, the business's predictive statistics have assisted entrepreneurs save a substantial chunk of change on up-and-coming series.For instance, 2 yrs ago, Networked Experience analyzed the internet chatter all around the new ABC comedy "Modern Family." By advocating sponsors to purchase the show within the 2009-10 upfront, the organization saved early wild birds around $155,000 per 30-second place. ("Modern Family" visited market at $65,000 a place, a cost that will soar to $220,000 because the show grew to become no. 1 comedy on television.)"TV works, but we have to stop using blunt instruments to purchase TV," Neely stated. "We now have these precision tools at our disposal . . . It's uncommon to maintain doing things the way in which we also have.Inch Adweek

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Gabai launches Check for indie releases

Checks first release InSight stars Christopher Lloyd. Disappointed with the small number of screens independent films have been able to secure in recent years, producer Richard Gabai has formed Check Entertainment Distribution to market and distribute a slate of nonstudio fare. Company's first release will be the thriller "InSight," which bows Sept. 2, over Labor Day weekend, and Broken Glass Pictures' "Five Star Day," starring Cam Gigandet, in early November. Susie Niwa, who spent 12 years at 20th Century Fox and also worked for TriStar and Vivendi, will oversee deals with exhibs for Check Entertainment as VP of distribution. Shingle will release up to five films per year, with the company also helping handle releases in foreign markets. Exec first worked with Gabai when Fox released the Gabai-produced "Supercross," and in 2009, when Vivendi distribbed "Call of the Wild 3D," which Gabai produced and helmed. Gabai decided to take distribution into his own hands after growing frustrated with the limited number of screens on which his own films have played: The critically lauded "Beautiful Boy," for example, won kudos at last year's Toronto Film Festival but earned just $77,000 in its Anchor Bay release in July. "Independent films have been squeezed off of the bigscreen for too long," Gabai said. "Having been an independent filmmaker for 23 years, I'm very familiar with the challenges of getting a smaller film into the marketplace. I hope that my company will be able to streamline the process." "The normal approach would be to target L.A. and New York to create buzz, but we're going to try to open (films) as wide as possible on opening day," he added. "We all have to raise the profile of our movies, and a theatrical release still has the most impact." For "InSight," company has deals with AMC to play the pic on screens at the Empire in New York, Ontario Mills mall and the Block in Orange, Calif. In order to land the screens, however, CED will hold off on experimenting with release windows. The homevid for "InSight" won't bow until January. "InSight," directed by Gabai, follows an ER nurse (Natalie Zea) who experiences a victim's memories after she's electrocuted by the defibrillator used to save a woman's life. Sean Patrick Flannery, Adam Baldwin and Christopher Lloyd co-star. Contact Marc Graser at marc.graser@variety.com

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

CAA-Joined Private Equity Finance Firm, Who owns 'American Idol' CKx Consider EMI Bids

NEW You are able to - David Bonderman's private equity finance firm TPG Capital, which lately purchased a 35 % stake in Hollywood agency CAA, and Apollo Global Management, which captured acquired The American Idol Show owner CKx, are among individuals carrying out research for any potential bid for music major EMI, the brand new You are able to Publish reported on Wednesday. Private equity finance-backed music posting venture BMG Privileges can also be looking, the paper stated. Len Blavatnik's Access Industries, which completed its purchase of Warner Group recently, is broadly seen as an lead suitor given that it may achieve cost synergies between your two major labels. EMI functions include Coldplay and also the Gorillaz. Loan provider Citigroup, which taken back EMI from private equity finance firm Terra Firma once the latter went into financial problems, is ending up in suitors who're performing research, the Publish stated. It outlined though the debt financing that private equity finance groups will appear at for any deal is originating in a greater cost among a less strong economic outlook. EMI has told suitors that it's prepared to sell itself off in pieces, which may make financing of more compact deals simpler, the Publish stated. Related Subjects Warner Group EMI

Today on indieWIRE: Harry Shearer, Toronto, Reviews & More

Today on indieWIRE, we talked with beloved "mockumentarian" Harry Shearer about his first feature-length (and factual) documentary, 'The Big Uneasy'; we heard from Howard Feinstein on his resignation from the Sarajevo FF; got updated on the TIFF lineup; and 'Mozart's Sister' and 'Drive' got reviewed. When Celebrity Overwhelms Auteurs: Howard Feinstein on Resigning From the Sarajevo Film Festival: We're publishing Howard Feinstein's first-person piece on his reasons for resigning from the Sarajevo Film Festival with the caveat that we're not taking sides; there's two sides to every story and here only Howard has the floor. REVIEW | 'Mozart's Sister' Fills in a Historical Gap With a Sad Saga: 'Mozart's Sister,' a fictionalized take on Anna "Nannerl" Mozart's teenage years written and directed by French filmmaker René Féret, puts a reasonable face on the character's blurry legacy. indieWIRE's Project of the Day: Panama's Very Special Beauty Pageant: Here's your daily dose of an indie film in progress; at the end of the week, you'll have the chance to vote for your favorite. Small Screens: Talking With Pick of the Week Director Harry Shearer and More DVD/VOD Goodness: Beloved "mockumentarian" ('This is Spinal Tap,' 'A Mighty Wind') and voice-work titan ('The Simpsons') Harry Shearer gets the inside story behind the New Orleans disaster in his first feature-length (and factual) documentary, 'The Big Uneasy.' TIFF List 2011: The Announced Toronto Film Festival Lineup: More updates to the highly-anticipated TIFF lineup. The 10 Things You Must Know Before You Set Foot on the Festival Circuit: Independent film advice is the ultimate in self-help literature; most filmmakers can't afford other options. Toronto Film Festival Adds Galas, Special Presentations, World Cinema & More: The 36th Toronto International Film Festival revealed more of its extensive lineup today, with eight more titles added to its Galas including Closing Night film 'Page Eight' by British filmmaker David Hare as well as 18 Special Presentations. 4 Clips & New Pics From Johnnie To's Economic Meltdown Drama 'Life Without Principle': Announced last week as a final addition to the Venice Festival, and joining the TIFF lineup this morning, Johnnie To's 'Life Without Principle' seems to be a pretty overwrought affair about these financially lean times that have weighed heavily on people from all facets of life. Empire Big Screen '11 Review: Nicolas Winding Refn's 'Drive' Reminds Us Why We Love the Movies: It's lucky that Nicolas Winding Refn's 'Drive' has come along: It's a shot of pure cinema straight to the eyeball. Watch: Victorian-Era Ladies Squirm With Delight in "'Hysteria' Trailer: Fresh off of making the Toronto International Film Festival's official lineup earlier this morning, the Maggie Gyllenhall and Hugh Dancy-fronted period comedy 'Hysteria' has dropped its first trailer.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Final Destination 5's Tony Todd Names His Favorite On-Screen Brushes with Death

As William Bludworth, the coroner who’s witnessed many a teenager attempt to cheat fate in Final Destination, Final Destination 2, and this Friday’s 3-D sequel Final Destination 5, actor Tony Todd carries an eerie, prescient look in his eyes — the look of a man who knows Death’s secrets. Of course, Todd has plenty of experience himself toying with the agency of death in cinema, having starred in countless horror films, from the iconic Candyman series to the Night of the Living Dead remake to Adam Green’s Hatchet and Hatchet II. So Movieline queried the horror icon: Which are the most memorable on-screen deaths he’s either suffered, inflicted or witnessed over his 25-year career? In addition to sharing his favorite career deaths, Todd shared reflections on his career to date, described what it’s like to go on a sushi date with action legend Sonny Chiba, and discussed his passion project Eerie, PA, the indie crime pic he wrote and will make his directorial debut with. But first: Which movie deaths are dearest to Tony Todd’s heart? Platoon (1986) Todd landed one of his first film roles in Oliver Stone’s Platoon, playing Bravo squad leader Sgt. Warren. Wounded in a firefight during the church ambush scene… “My first death was in Platoon, in that second-to-last firefight. I’ll never forget that, because a) it was the first one and b) we were in some strange country called The Phillippines, which was fascinating — everything grows larger there. And it was Oliver Stone. It was immersive. We went to that mock boot camp, and we only got three hours of sleep a night, and would wake to firefights — simulated firefights, thank God. It gave me a deeper respect for the military service, I tell you that.” Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh (1995) The sequel to boogeyman tale Candyman reveals how the titular killer (Todd), once a Louisiana man named Daniel Robitaille, was tragically murdered at the hands of a lynch mob… and a bunch of bees. [Movieline points out that between Candyman 2 and My Girl, the early ’90s were a time of heightened bee-phobia.] “As a matter of fact, I think the same bee wrangler worked on both of those. Norman Gary, based out of the Sacramento area. You try to remember your crew and your cast; if you don’t do that, what else do you have? I counted once in a moment of boredom; I think I’ve died over twenty times in films, one way or the other.” The Rock (1996) Michael Bay would later cast (and kill in grandiose fashion) Todd in his Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, in which Todd voiced The Fallen. But in 1996, Todd had fun on another large-scale Michael Bay set, playing a mercenary who turns on his boss (Ed Harris) in The Rock. “I think the way I was killed in The Rock was pretty inventive, because I got shot out at Alcatraz, over the San Francisco Bay by a giant nuclear missile and ended up in a fence post. [Laughs] You know, like a stuffed insect. But that particular sequence took over two and a half weeks to film. It was Michael Bay. Two and a half weeks. ‘Basically, Tony we need you to get back up into the air, then we need you to wiggle your left finger.’ Of course, it only translates to, what, twenty seconds of film? But then again, it’s Michael Bay, and everything is big, big, big, big!” Final Destination (2000) Though he’s one of few to avoid Death’s gaze in the Final Destination films, the first installment in the series features one of his favorite death scenes — one not involving his character, William Bludworth. “I like one of the first kills in the first Final Destination, when the girl steps off the curb and gets hit by the bus. It was sudden, it didn’t linger, it was a surprise — I don’t think anybody had ever seen that before. That was extraordinary.” Hatchet II (2010) Todd reprised his role as Rev. Zombie for Adam Green’s Hatchet II, which culminates in a showdown between him and Kane Hodder’s swamp-dwelling killer, Victor Crowley. “Most recently, I did Hatchet II. Kane Hodder, who’s a good friend of mine — crazy, but a good friend — he kills my character at the end. I’m the final death in that one. Not only is it a kill, it’s a three-step kill: I’m sort of the antagonist throughout, and basically we fight, he steps on me… [Laughs] And then he steps on the back of my neck, then he’s still not done. So he reaches and pulls out my spine, and there’s a shot of my inner being being held up by a tree, and I think he does something else — he throws me against a tree trunk.”

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Ryan Reynolds' 5 Most Memorable Roles

Ryan Reynolds' hasn't always been "People's" Sexiest Man Alive, but he's been in the acting game for many years now.With a slew of TV roles in the U.S. and his native Canada through the early '90s, Reynolds graduated to a bona fide movie star in the early 2000s with starring roles in "Van Wilder" and "Blade: Trinity."Before watching his latest flick, "The Change-Up," take a look back at five of Reynolds' most memorable and career shaping roles. Sorry "Green Lantern" -- you may have gotten a sequel, but you don't quite make the cut here. 1. "Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place" (1998-2001): It's easy to forget that before the actor was a leading man on the silver screen, he was already a familiar face on the small screen. Reynolds starred as Berg, one of the "guys" referenced in the ABC Sitcom's title, opposite Traylor Howard and Richard Ruccolo.2. "Van Wilder" (2002): Reynolds landed his first true leading man role in Myriad Pictures' college comedy, directed by Walt Becker. At 25-years old, Reynolds nailed the title role as the hard partying co-ed who, after seven years of school, refused to leave his college days behind him.3. "Blade: Trinity" (2004): Reynolds tried action adventure on for size in the third installment of the Wesley Snipes starring franchise, Blade. Sporting a full beard and some serious muscles, the role put him the map as more than just a funny-guy.4. "Waiting" (2005): Reynolds flexed his comedic chops opposite Anna Faris, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Dane Cook and Justin Long (to name just a few) in the low budget film that quickly became a cult classic among restaurant employees. As the cocky, smooth-talking waiter Monty, Reynolds provided hilarious narrative of the murky waters that almost all food service employees are forced to navigate.5. "The Proposal" (2009): Starring as Sandra Bullock's loyal, but abused, assistant, the Anne Fletcher directed RomCom showcased a perfect give and take between the film's two stars. Ironically, the film sees Reynolds as an American citizen whose boss runs the risk of being deported to Canada. In real life, Reynolds hails from Vancouver, while Bullock was born in Arlington, Virginia.Just missing the cut? Teaming with Faris again in 2005, his role in "Just Friends" proved that even a fat suit couldn't dim his star power.You can see Reynolds opposite Jason Bateman in The Change-Up, opening nationwide on Friday, Aug. 5th. The Hollywood Reporter

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The Twilight Cast Talk Breaking Dawn

What can we expect from the finale?The final Twilight book is the most far-out of the quartet, but that hasn't deterred director Bill Condon and his cast from taking a crack at it and, judging by what we saw at Comic-Con, delivering a cinematic version that will satisfy fans without going full slasher-movie. And here's a few more tidbits from the cast and director Bill Condon on what we can expect from The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1, and what it was like to finish shooting the entire saga. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 is out on November 18, 2011, all over the world. Be ready, Twi-hards.

Monday, August 1, 2011

National Geographic DogTown

National Geographic teams up with the top-notch veterinarians and trainers at Best Friends Animal Sanctuary to learn what it takes to rehabilitate abandoned, abused and problem pets and find them loving homes. DogTown is the largest no-kill animal facility in the country and has long been a sanctuary for dogs nobody else wanteda miracle for animals that need extra medical attention or behavior help.