Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Donald Trump dumps Rachel Uchitel from 'Celeb Apprentice' list




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Only one reality show with "Celebrity" in the title for you, Rachel Uchitel.

"Celebrity Apprentice" star/producer Donald Trump, who was recruiting Tiger Woods' ur-mistress to be part of the next edition of the NBC show, has lost interest after she agreed to do VH1's "Celebrity Rehab."




"It's a terrible decision. We have zero interest in her now," Trump tells TMZ. "Look at what 'Celebrity Apprentice' did for Piers Morgan. He's getting Larry King's job. She made a bad mistake."

And this: "'Celebrity Apprentice' is a huge show and 'Celebrity Rehab' is not. ... I'm moving on."

We think maybe that Morgan's "America's Got Talent" stint and his well-regarded interview shows on British TV might have had something to do with his impending CNN gig, but we'll grant The Donald his point that "The Celebrity Apprentice" is much bigger (albeit not "huge") than "Celeb Rehab."

We just hope Dr. Drew can help Rachel with her love addiction.








Man charged with stalking Jennifer Garner, family



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Steven Burky was arrested at the nursery school where Violet, one of Garner's two daughters with husband Ben Affleck, is enrolled.

A man arrested outside a school attended by the daughter of Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck has been charged with felony stalking and violating a restraining order protecting the family.




Steven Burky, 37, was arrested in Santa Monica on Monday at the nursery school where Violet Affleck, one of the couple's two daughters, is enrolled.

He pleaded not guilty at an arraignment Thursday afternoon and was ordered held on $300,000 bail, District Attorney's spokeswoman Jane Robison said. A judge also ordered him to stay 500 feet away from Garner, Affleck and their family if released.

A phone message left at Pennsylvania number listed for Burky was not returned Thursday. Robison said he was represented in court by a public defender.

Burky was charged with two counts of felony stalking and two counts of violating a court order, a misdemeanor. A criminal complaint filed in the case alleges Burky harassed Affleck and Garner and made credible threats that place both "in reasonable fear" for the safety of their family.

Garner was granted a restraining order against Burky in November 2008 after she told the court she believed he posed a threat to her and her family. Garner said Burky had been stalking her since 2002.

The former star of the television series Alias, Garner has also appeared in films such as Juno and The Kingdom.

Affleck won an Oscar in 1997 with Matt Damon for writing the screenplay to Good Will Hunting. He and Garner married in June 2005.

Garner, Affleck and their daughter are covered by a restraining order that is due to expire in November 2011. Burky was to stay 100 yards away from the family's cars, homes and schools.



Jennifer Aniston granted restraining order



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Gerard Butler and JEnnifer in premier of movie.

The Associated Press is reporting that Jennifer Aniston has been granted a temporary restraining order against a man who authorities say claims he is going to marry the former Friends star.




Jason R. Peyton was detained by police in Santa Monica, Calif., last week with duct tape, a sharp object and love notes he'd written to Aniston, court records show.

According to court documents filed Tuesday, Peyton has been accused of stalking in the past and has refused to obey court orders that he stay on his anti-psychotic medications.

Jersey Shore cast triples salaries for Season 3



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GOOD SITUATION: The Situation, Snooki, Vinny, Sammi, Pauly D, Ronnie, JWOWW and Angelina just wrapped Season 2.

Four "Jersey Shore" stars have gotten huge raises to return for next season.

Breakout stars Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi, Mike "The Situation" Sorrentino, Paul "Pauly D" DelVecchio and Jennni "JWOWW" Farley will each earn about $30,000 per episode next season for MTV's biggest show since "The Osbournes."






Deals for the rest of the cast -- Ronnie Ortiz-Magro, Vinny GuaDagnino and Sammi Giancola -- are for less, sources say. Cast member Angelina Pivarnick will not return for Season 3.

All returning cast members will get a very big increase over their $10,000-per-episode take for Season 2 (premiering July 29) -- and a huge increase over the $5,000-per-episode they earned in Season 1.
"The cast always wanted to come back because it's such a fun show to do," says one insider. "They know it's gotten them to where they are now."

That's an understatement. The show's success now earns Pauly up to $80,000 a week for his DJ work, sources say -- while mega-maned Snooki earns up to $20,000 for a personal appearance and The Situation has a profitable line of "pre-workout" vitamins.

"MTV is pleased that the 'Jersey Shore' cast are returning to Seaside Heights to continue production on Season 3," MTV said in a statement last night.

Sources say MTV initially balked at the cast members' contract demands, fearing they would morph into versions of their former network cousins on "The Hills." Two of that show's stars, Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt, turned into insufferable, obnoxious media hogs after the show became a hit.

"Jersey Shore" averaged 2.7 million viewers last season.







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Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Now and Then: Lindsay Lohan's dueling mugshots


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What a difference three years has made in Lindsay Lohan's looks.

Her 2007 mug shot (right) for one of the two DUI convictions that basically resulted in her current imprisonment due to violations of parole really shows how much she's had done to her upper and lower Donald Duck lips.






In the 2010 booking photo (left), she gives a menacing and amused smirk. Even her eyes now look dead and creepy. And the long, thin, dry hair has faded from a golden blonde to a lighter, ashier hue.

Considering she was clearly blitzed in the 2007 photo, shouldn't she have looked a lot better in the current shot? After all, she's been wearing that SCRAM bracelet for a while, right?

She's certainly working on a nice little prison photo portfolio.






Comic-Con: A destination convention for TV too



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'TRUE BLOOD': Anna Paquin, with Joe Manganiello, is among cast members expected at Comic Con.

The annual fanboy confab has become a can't-miss marketing spot for the small screen too, with networks and studios hawking their latest shows, no matter how slight the geek connection.





Homer Simpson, Stewie Griffin and SpongeBob SquarePants are the kinds of characters you'd expect to see hanging around the teeming corridors of Comic-Con, the annual comics, games and toys convention that gathers through this weekend in San Diego.

But what about those crooning kids from "Glee," Fox's live-action hit? Where exactly is the comic-book connection to USA's crime procedural "White Collar"? Tell us again why there's a panel devoted to "Dexter," Showtime's sly serial killer drama, which was adapted from a novel, but not one of the graphic variety?

Asking such questions may be beside the point at Comic-Con, which for TV executives � following in the steps of their movie brethren � has become a can't-miss marketing destination where networks and studios jostle to hawk their latest wares while swag-toting throngs of eager fanboys and fangirls appreciatively (well, mostly) eat it all up. More than 125,000 attendees and nearly 1,000 exhibitors are expected to swarm the San Diego Convention Center this weekend. People have had to be turned away � about 400 companies hoping to set up booths were sent away this year � due to space limits, which is a key factor driving organizers to investigate possibly moving the gathering to larger facilities in Anaheim or Los Angeles (Comic-Con is booked in San Diego through at least 2012).


"The fans who come to Comic-Con get an opportunity to talk to the people who actually make" entertainment, said David Glanzer, the longtime spokesman for the convention. "There's a benefit to listening to the people who will end up tuning in to your show." Glanzer cited the examples of "Family Guy" and "Futurama," two shows that were brought back by popular demand after the network canceled them. And fans' rescue of the original "Star Trek" TV series after it was axed by NBC in the mid-1960s has attained mythic status within the sci-fi community.

"It helps us reach this audience," Showtime Executive Vice President Len Fogge said of the convention. "They're tastemakers. They're online-savvy and they get the word out." He added that, due to the spread of Twitter and other social media, "now, word-of-mouth is one mouth to 500" people, which helps enhance a marketing campaign for a relatively small investment.

Notable TV panels this year include a session on Syfy's " Caprica," targeted at the same fan base that embraced "Battlestar Galactica"; another visit from Alan Ball, creator of HBO's vampire hit "True Blood" and cast members, including Anna Paquin; and an exchange between J.J. Abrams (" Lost," "Fringe," "Alias") and Joss Whedon ( "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"), who among the Comic-Con faithful count as nothing less than gods.

George Schweitzer, president of CBS Marketing Group, said that he and other executives at the company's No. 1-rated broadcast network decided to ramp up their involvement this year, including its first-ever booth on the convention floor and some panels nerdy enough to please the most discriminating purist: " CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" creator Anthony Zuiker will talk about the explosion of gadgetry on TV shows, and the cast of the geek-sitcom hit "Big Bang Theory" will also hold court.

"Comic-Con helped launch that show," Schweitzer said of "Big Bang." "That has shrine status."

CBS also decided, less obviously, to bring along its new remake of " Hawaii Five-O," which had less to do with the cop franchise itself and more with the fact that it is being overseen by Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, who worked on Abrams' hit feature remake of "Star Trek." "Fans want to keep up with the people they love from television and movies and they want to know the next big thing they're doing," Schweitzer said.

At last year's Comic-Con, Fox gave a boost to the fledgling "Glee" by premiering an entire episode to a boisterous, standing-room-only crowd; this time, creator Ryan Murphy is bringing some previously unseen footage and promising to answer fan questions.

"Comic-Con is a unique opportunity to reach the biggest of those fans," said Gary Newman, chairman of 20th Century Fox Television, the studio behind "Glee" and "The Simpsons." "The people who will blog about our shows, the early adopters of shows, the people who care deeply about television and content � and, by the way, the people who will buy your merchandise, buy your DVDs � follow it from platform to platform."

OK, but is "Glee" really a natural fit at perhaps the only place on Earth where a packed roomful of grown-ups can get seriously excited by the Season 2 premiere of "Hot Wheels Battle Force 5"? "I think the characters in 'Glee' would've been at home in Comic-Con," Newman said. Fox is taking only one new show this year � the midseason animated series "Bob's Burgers" � because its other premieres simply didn't mesh well with Comic-Con's sensibility, Newman said.

Some studios "try to take shows that don't really belong there," Newman said. "We've tried to stay away from that."









Ali Larter in New Residet Evil: After life trailer with MIlla Jovovich



see an unpregnant Ali next in "Resident Evil: Afterlife" with Milla Jovovich and Wentworth Miller on September 10. We've already seen the trailer and it so rocks.