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B.S. & Hollywood

Everybody Hates Bullshattuck (Episode 3), Starring Cher

Dont_offend_her_please

She's won an Emmy for The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour. She's won an Academy Award for Moonstruck. She's won like a billion Grammys for who even knows. And now, as if she hasn't done enough already, Cher is inspiring people to declare their hatred for me.

I wrote a column for the Daily Utah Chronicle a few days ago. It's important to note that this column was not about Cher. It had nothing to do with Cher at all. Rather, it was about the loss of privacy in the age of Google. I made one random, dumb joke about Cher. I'll admit that the joke didn't really make that much sense. It is as follows:

Many people want to be famous, whether it be the hordes of people auditioning for "American Idol," or Cher, whose desperate attempts at clinging to fame are marked by the fact that she's had more farewell tours than most people have teeth.

And then they released the hounds.

People (whom I assume to be rabid fans of the Salt Lake City branch of Cher's fan club, escaped patients from the local mental ward, or a combination of both), went bat-defecation crazy! People started leaving all sorts of wonderfully ridiculous comments on my column. I was accused of not being factual! I was accused of defamation! I was accused of shoddy journalism! I was accused of personally being responsible for the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, for causing the Iran-Contra Scandal, and of giving Suri Cruise too much candy before bedtime! (c'mon, you know it keeps her up at night)

Now added to my list of never-joke-about topics: "Cher." She should take comfort in knowing that she joins such other renowned never-joke-about topics as "Mother Teresa," "breast cancer," "Tamagotchis," and the "Olive Garden." "Ugly toupees" is still pending approval.

I won't post all of the Ryan-Shattuck-should-die comments, as I don't have that kind of storage or bandwith. If you're interested, you can read them in their entirety here.

I will however include my favorite comment, as left by the president of of Cher's Salt Lake City Fan Club:

Dumbass

This Video Will Actually Alter Your Sexual Orientation

WARNING: This video is the gayest video a person can possibly watch in their lifetime.

If you're straight, you will be overwhelmed by the urge to date the same gender, listen to Mika, and get a pedicure.

If you're gay, you will actually find a way to become straight, simply so that you may relish the process of becoming gay all over again.

Yes. It's that gay.

Consider yourself warned...

(credit: Best Week Ever)

Diablo Cody Won't Leave Me Alone

Seriously, déjà vu is so last year. Wait, did you just say that? I could have sworn that I've been here before. Hasn't this happened before? I'm totally tripping out.

Seriously, déjà vu is so last year. But I'm not interested in déjà vu. I'm interested in déjà vu's retarded cousin, "life themes™."

I've had a theory for a number of years that we sometimes experiences different themes in life, what I like to call life themes™. Now these themes aren't the broad topics which surreptitiously find themselves in the national dialogue, having been injected into the consciousness by something as obvious as the media. They're also different than the notion of 'buzz,' as concocted by Hollywood and Sundance and other Fake People. Life themes™ come and go. They're peculiar and random. They're not Barack Obama. He's anywhere and everywhere, and has been on everyone's mind for months. Rather, life themes™ tend to be more personal, and genuinely rather fleeting, unlike Hillary Clinton (zing!)

Two presidential candidates in a non-political paragraph, sheesh.

Mimes. I first noticed this phenomenon with mimes. Several years ago, during a span of about a week or so, I noticed that everything I saw, read, and heard involved mimes. Mimes in the news. Mimes in movies. Mimes on television. Mimes even on the radio. I even had a friend of mine who was training to become a mime (no, not really). Everything revolved around mimes and then, out of nowhere, they disappeared. Not a single mime to be found.

And thus the life theme™ was born.

Im_tired_of_her

My current life theme™ is Diablo Cody. Now I realize that this probably breaks my rule of "the life theme™ can't be something obvious from the news," but considering that this is my hypothesized phenomenon, I get to make the rules as I go. I had never heard of Diablo Cody previous to a few days ago. I saw the film Juno, and yet never learned about Diablo Cody. I didn't read her blog, I didn't care that she was a stripper, and I had no idea that her bob makes her look like a fat, homeless Anna Wintour. And then out of nowhere, everywhere I turned:

Diablo Cody
Diablo Cody
Diablo Cody

I can't seem to escape her! She fills my RSS reader. She continues to appear in the news. She's mentioned time and again in my favorite podcasts. She's American Exress - she's everywhere I want to be (and like my American Express, she doesn't pay for anything).

This having been said, I've decided to embrace Diablo Cody, my current life theme™. I may find her to be annoying and hypocritical, but I may also just be jealous of her success. Blogger turned Academy Award winning screenwriter? AND a background as a stripper? What's not to love?

Has anyone else ever experienced this - a life theme™? I'm genuinely curious to know if other people have noticed this phenomenon. Email me and tell me about your own life theme™

Or just tell me how obnoxious you think Diablo Cody is.

Either way, I'll agree with you.

ABC Thinks There's Nothing Gay About the Oscars

Apparently ABC is afraid of offending Oscars viewers with gay content. Which makes sense, because the Oscars is only the gay community's largest television event of the year. If anything, I'm surprised that annual Gay Pride parades aren't scheduled to fall on the same weekend as the Oscars - it only seems appropriate.

When No Country for Old Men producer Scott Rudin won the Oscar for Best Picture and thanked his partner John Barlow last night, ABC thought they would do a little trimming from the official transcript.

Here's the official transcript (by way of Queerty.com):

Transcript

And here's the video (by way of Queerty.com):

ABC, I'm really disappointed in you. So now you edit 'objectionable' content out of your transcripts, for fear that it may offend your conservative watchers?

I keep forgetting... am I watching the Oscars on ABC, or Fox News?

The 2008 Oscars Review/Autopsy (Stolen from Ken Levine)

Today is a busy Monday morning for me. Not only do I have a billion things to do on this gloomy and rainy Monday, but I also do not have a single original opinion in my empty head this morning.

That having been said, I thought I would share the following 2008 Oscars Review/Autopsy, which I stole from Ken Levine with the Huffington Post. It made me laugh.

This was Hollywood's biggest night -- when we paid tribute to this year's excellence in motion picture Oscar campaigns. The two leading contenders for Best Picture were one with a baffling ending and one that puts half the audience into a coma. Those marketing boys know how to spin a yarn.

I'm sure for most viewers, these are what they thought were the five nominees for Best Picture: Something Something Country, Something Something Blood, Michael Jordan, that thing with whatshername, and one of those Knocked Up movies.

Was there a single winner the first hour from America? This was the United Nations general assembly with production numbers. Every speech was like Borat but not funny.

We ended the writers strike for THIS? Jesus! The best thing I can say about this Oscarcast is that there were no shadow puppets this year.

Had we not settled this is what the show would have been, and tell me you wouldn't have preferred it.

"Please welcome your host, ABC foreign correspondent, Joohee Cho!"

The "In Memoriam" tribute would be stretched so long that by the end someone new would have to be added.

"Singing the nominated song from Enchanted, here is ABC sideline reporter Bonnie Bernstein!"

"The theme this year: Stunt doubles. Those brave men and women who look like your favorite stars and tonight will get to BE them."

"The no-good son of a bitch nominees for best Original Screenplay are..."


At least that show might have had some surprises. All the locks won. Something Something Country swept the big awards. The only surprises were Marion Cotillard beating Julie Christie (and by the way, doesn't Edith Piaf clean up well? Wow!) and La Vie en Rose edging out Norbit for Best Makeup. Eddie Murphy was robbed AGAIN!

The flood watch was canceled prior to the show. We didn't get to see Anne Hathaway in her Jimmy Choo golashes.

But those inane red carpet shows went off as planned. My favorite was the local one for KABC in Los Angeles hosted by entertainment boot lickers, George Pennachio and Richard Roeper. When they're not gushing like school girls they're asking the most idiotic questions. George to Heidi Klum: "It's great to be at an event like this. How did YOU get invited?" To Amy Ryan he asked, "If you win will you be thanking the Teamsters?"

Richard Roeper to Tom Wilkinson about his role in Michael Clayton: "You had those big operatic scenes and were able to play way over-the-top." Surprisingly, Wilkinson took offense at that. George asked Sara Lawson if she beaded her dress herself? And serving as a fashion expert was Channel 7 Eyewitness News anchor, Michelle Tuzee. Just last week after reporting a bus plunge she complained that new Cypriot leader Demetris Christofias was a "nightmare in blue."

"Who are you wearing?" used to refer to dress designers. Now it means tattoo artists.

No Joan & Melissa Rivers this year. The red carpet equivalent of Mom & Norman Bates have run out of networks. Joan is doing a one-woman show in LA and for the first time ever on Oscar night is performing to more than 200 people.

The Hollywood cause this year: the campaign to close Guantanamo. Celebrities wore orange ribbons to show their tremendous concern for this issue. Ask them what last year's cause was. Most will say, "Uh...red ribbons?"

Red was definitely the color of the night. Every other gown was red. It was like being at the Nebraska Cornhuskers homecoming dance.

Jon Stewart was funny but you need someone bigger, more larger-than-life to host such a grand event. Seriously, Joohee Cho would have kicked ass!

Usually they start out with an actor category or two. Not this year. We were 40 minutes into the show before anything happened. Kinda like sitting through Something Something Blood.

Since Cate Blanchett played Bob Dylan, shouldn't she be nominated for Best Supporting Actor?

Even pregnant and showing, Jessica Alba still was the hottest woman in the room.

My daughter Annie has a good rule. No movie over three hours should be eligible for Best Editing.

It would have been interesting if Roderick Jaynes had won for editing Something Something Country. Roderick Jaynes is just a pseudonym. The Coen Brothers actually edited their own movie.

Katherine Heigl was a knockout!! Marilyn Monroe at her most radiant and lucid.

I'm so excited. For the first time ever, a movie I co-wrote, Volunteers was included in an Oscarcast. There was a two second clip of it in the "periscope and binoculars" montage. Between that and picketing, I really feel like I'm part of the industry now.

Ratatouille deserved not just Best Animated Picture but Best Picture as well. You didn't have to say you liked the movie just because critics did. You could actually like the movie yourself.

Diablo Cody came as Cleopatra: biker chick. I was happy she won for Best Original Screenplay. I liked the message Hollywood was sending: "No more Nancy Meyers comedies!"

How could the Academy nominate Lars and the Real Girl for writing and shun I Know Who Killed Me?

Tilda Swinton looked like Conan O'Brien. I was glad she won too. Maybe now she can afford two sleeves.

Al Gore and Cher have more Oscars than Johnny Depp.

How do I describe Cameron Diaz's dress? It's like if you tried to gift-wrap a vacuum cleaner.

Owen Wilson looked good and is apparently over that pesky suicide deal. They should have had him intro the "In Memoriam" tribute. By the way, they forgot Brad Renfro.

Oh no! Jerry Seinfeld pimping that Goddamn bee movie AGAIN?! Make it stop!! At least in the "hilarious" montage they didn't show My Girl where the lead character dies from a bee sting.

Daniel Day-Lewis finally won his Oscar for Gangs of New York. When he someday shuttles his mortal coil I'm sure the cause of death will be: choked on some scenery.

If you want to vote for the
11-year-old girl from the August Rush song - 1-866-IDOLS 04.

I guess Nicole Kidman couldn't decide which necklace to wear so she wore them all. She looked like a Christmas tree with tinsel put on by a drunk.

My guess is the three songs from Enchanted canceled each other out. For Kristen Chenowith's number there were dancers and acrobats flying everywhere, a bridge, flowers, props, costumes. But for the star of the film, Amy Adams -- a bare set and a dress she couldn't move in. Nice.

I was thrilled however when Best Song went to Glen Hansard and Marketa Inglova for Once. And the highlight of the night was letting Marketa come back and deliver her acceptance speech after the music had pushed her off. Watch. Cuba Gooding Jr. is going to want to come back now. There's 50 more people he needs to thank.

The speeches I like are those rare few with genuine emotion. Marion Cotillard's and surprisingly, Diablo Cody's. She did not have to be censored even once.

I also was moved by 98-year-old, Robert Boyle, who received an honorary Oscar for working on hundreds of great, classic movies and Dragnet.

Penelope Cruz was smashing as usual but I'm not sure about furry black gown. She looked like Barney Rubble 's prom date.

Every year it's the same thing. The five nominees for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Documentary are four war movies and one about dance.

The winner of Best Documentary was from Austria and noted that many great film directors like Billy Wilder had to flee that country because of the Nazis and as luck would have it, his movie is about the Nazis. What is he talking about? Every Austrian movie is about the Nazis! Along with every book, every article, every children's song.

How'd you like to be in Paul Thomas Anderson's limo after the show? The director of Something Something Blood is probably going postal. "They don't understand my brilliance! My genius! I try to elevate the movie-going rabble! Give them art! Give them beauty! Take them to worlds the ingrates have no business seeing. And do they appreciate me? Do they at least acknowledge that I have been touched by the hand of God? No! They humiliate me in front of billions of people. They give away my award -- MY award -- to two hicks! Oooh, some trailer trash person finds a suitcase of money. That's real original. And bad guys are after him. Who's ever seen that before? Meanwhile, I make a masterpiece. Look at these ads the studio took out. What more proof do you want than that?! Oh, the hell with it. Just take me to the Vanity Fair party! I can drink myself to death there... What? Canceled?! Why? Writer's Strike? What the hell?!"

Remember when Al Pacino and Clint Eastwood and Julia Roberts and Meryl Streep and Robert DeNiro used to be at the Oscars? Now it's Miley Cyrus, Dwayne "the Rock" Johnson, Heidi Klum (how DID she get invited?), Jonah Hill, and Seth Rogen.

It's just not the same. It's just not as good. And it's still just as long.

But we watch. Every year we watch. I guess we just can't resist a good Oscar campaign.

Christina Aguilera Represents Two Large ConsTituents

As I've mentioned in past postings, I track pretty regularly the google searches that bring visitors to my site. On February 5th I wrote a rather dumb posting with the innocuous title of But Who Is CHRISTINA AGUILERA Voting For? One, the posting wasn't even about Christina Aguilera at all. Two, it's poor grammar (Who ends in a preposition anymore? What am I, twelve?).

In any case, I've noticed the following string of words are showing up in the google searches that are leading visitors to Bullshattuck:

christina aguilera voting
"christina aguilera voting"
+Christina +Aguilera +voting
christina aguilera voting
christina aguilera voting

I don't understand. Why are so many people obsessed with the presidential candidate that Christina Aguilera is voting for? Are people really making their own political decisions based on those of a celebrity?

Indulging my curiosity, I decided to google "Christina Aguilera voting" myself (which sounds inappropriate if you say it out loud).

I think I found out why so many people are googling Christina Aguilera - and I'm pretty sure that it has nothing to do with whom she's supporting for president:

(these pictures are exactly as I found them on Google - there was no cropping or editing on my part)

Christina_aguilera_voting

Christina_aguilera_still_voting

Ohhhhhhh... now I get it.

So Remember Kids: Never Get Married

Her_legs_are_sexy_2

Reading something like this today in the news - McCartney Agrees To $100+ Million Payout - should teach us the following three lessons:

1.) Don't ever become famous! Ever! Fame ruins everyone, and not a single famous person is happy!

2.) Don't ever get married! 100% of all marriages end in divorce and hefty out-of-court settlements! And while random, anonymous sex has the consequences of contracting an STD, marriage has the unfortunate consequence of children!

3.) Don't ever date Heather Mills!

Shouting aside, I take that back. Maybe some people should become famous and maybe some people should get married. Nevertheless, this is a rather unfortunate blow to the legacy of Paul McCartney - whose only crime was making great music and marrying a bitch. Kind of makes you long for the days of Linda.

So remember kids: While The Beatles may have sung "All You Need Is Love," it doesn't apply to you if you actually marry a Beatle.

CNN Deifies Ledger

(This article was published in the
February 8th, 2008 issue of the The Daily Utah Chronicle)



It's a sad fact of life.

Snow must melt. Leaves must fall. Sparrows must die. And Heath Ledger must pass away in his sleep. Thus is the order of life. And yet, despite these transitions, the Earth continues its eternal spin along its axis and the order of life continues.

But just barely. At least that's what CNN would have us believe.

As anyone who has ever owned a television knows, actor Ledger died a few weeks ago. What most people don't know is that such news affected me as if I had just stepped on a snail. Now, I realize that making derogatory comments about a celebrity who recently died makes me appear to have no soul. This is mostly true. Nevertheless, I truly believe that every life is precious and important. I just don't believe that every celebrity's death should be covered by the media as if it were something as banal as, oh, let's say Armageddon.

The week following Ledger's death, I turned on CNN expecting to hear the news. Instead I ended up learning more about the life of Ledger than I know about my own life. Being as disillusioned as I am when it comes to the mainstream media, should I be surprised that CNN -- in an attempt for higher ratings -- would choose to cover Ledger's death, breaking only to cover the U.S. presidential campaign and occasionally use the bathroom?

The death of a celebrity is a truly curious thing, regardless of who that celebrity might be. We are told that, because a particular person is now as dead as Generalissimo Francisco Franco, this person suddenly matters. Such was Ledger's case. While most of America yawned the day after his death, had their morning coffee and continued reading the newspapers, the morning media made the executive decision that for the rest of the day we MUST care about this death. The media decided for us that the loss of this particular life translated to more than just another body in the ground -- rather this would translate into a national tragedy on the scale of John F. Kennedy Jr., River Phoenix, Rudy Valentino and the McRib.

Consider the other following notable deaths that occurred the same week:

*Evan Galbraith, an American diplomat and ambassador to France

*James LeVoy Sorenson, a philanthropist and inventor credited with several life-saving, medical inventions

*Burton Hatlen, founder of the National Poetry Foundation

*Thomas Cecil Gray, a pioneer in anaesthetics

*Miles Lerman, the creator of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

*Dorothy Hennessey, nun and peace activist

Diplomats, ambassadors, philanthropists, medical inventors, poets, political leaders, activists. And the guy who starred in "The Brothers Grimm."

Why, one might ask, be frustrated by the coverage the media is giving Ledger's death? Perhaps it is because it is insulting to the hundreds of people who die in the United States everyday -- whether they be celebrities and politicians, or simply teachers and doctors. Do we see constant coverage for those who die in the military? Is Ledger's deification, as demonstrated in the mainstream media, common for "ordinary" people who do such boring things as teach children and save lives? It would be one thing if CNN devoted 24-hour, non-stop coverage to someone who had left an overwhelmingly positive impact on society. But was anyone's life changed by "A Knight's Tale?"

I value people and I value all life. Nevertheless, I believe that respect should be given where respect is deserved. If a person passes away -- a person who finds a cure for AIDS, for example -- I then believe that this person would deserve to have 24-hour coverage on CNN. And to be celebrated with parades and parties and cupcakes and champagne. If on the other hand, Paris Hilton suddenly dies (let's assume for irony's sake that she died of AIDS), perhaps CNN should take five minutes out of their day. And then move on.

It's true that Ledger will be missed. Unfortunately, that's the order of life. The clock moves forwards, the Earth continues to spin, and people will continue to die. As Benjamin Franklin once famously said, "In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes."

He later added, "And 24-hour coverage of your death if you're a celebrity."

Return of Stewart and Colbert and Not Bullshattuck

So I suppose I've accepted the fact that during the holidays, I am simply too fat and too lazy to post much to my blog. It's ironic, isn't it: I have more time now that I'm not in school for the next few weeks, and yet having more free time means I don't find time to blog. Go figure.

But in the meanwhile, while you wait for me to find my inspiration again to daily blog...

GOOD NEWS: Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert will be returning to television on January 2nd!

BAD NEWS: But without their writers!

In a joint statement, Stewart and Colbert said:

"We would like to return to work with our writers. If we cannot, we would like to express our ambivalence, but without our writers we are unable to express something as nuanced as ambivalence."

Now you can finally watch someone perform comedy with a gun pointed at their head - the way it's always meant to be.

Daly the Scab

Carson Daly about to defy writers strike, according to the Associated Press.

Responded the Writers Guild of America,

"The Writers Guild of America, East joins our colleagues of the Writers Guild of America, West in expressing our profound disappointment with Carson Daly's decision to return to work . . . We thank them [other late-night talk show hosts] and hope that Mr. Daly will reconsider his decision, including the soliciting of scab writers to provide material for his program."

Honestly, do we need another reason to hate Carson Daly?