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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
eoe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 09:42 am
Letty, that just goes to show you that there's no such thing as an overnight sensation. Jamie Foxx has been around since the mid/late 80's and had his own little sitcom for several years.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 10:10 am
eoe, I didn't know that. Perhaps it's just that I didn't put face to name. Another oops, folks. What was the title of the sitcom?
0 Replies
 
eoe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 12:27 pm
The Jamie Foxx Show.

It's okay, Letty. He simply didn't appear on your radar. I first saw him many years ago on "In Living Color." He played a character named Wanda, in full drag. He was absolutely hysterical and it was clear right then, at least to me, that someday he was going to be big.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 01:07 pm
I don't watch many sitcoms any more, eoe, but I certainly will try to watch out for Jamie Foxx now.
0 Replies
 
smorgs
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 01:28 pm
Good Evening Letty et al,

Enjoying the show, here are the winners of the annual BAFTA awards. The event was well attended by the Hollywood fraternity - Scorsese, Dicaprio to name but a few of the American 'big knobs' who graced the red carpet on a cold February night!

This event is seen as a 'barometer' for the forthcoming Oscar's in March.

As for the women...there was more botox than Gus could shake his stick at. How can you call yourself an 'actor' when you have no facial expressions anymore?

Smorgs

Roving Showbiz Reporter




THE ORANGE BRITISH ACADEMY FILM AWARDS IN 2005


WINNERS ANNOUNCED


The Aviator has won four BAFTAs and Vera Drake has won three at The Orange British Academy Film Awards. Ray , Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and The Motorcycle Diaries won two BAFTAs each.

The Aviator received Awards in the categories Film , Actress in a Supporting Role for Cate Blanchett , Make-Up & Hair and Production Design . Mike Leigh won the David Lean Award for Achievement in Direction and Imelda Staunton won Actress in a Leading Role for Vera Drake . The film also won for Costume Design .

Jamie Foxx won the Award for Actor in a Leading Role for Ray , and the film also won the Sound BAFTA. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind won BAFTAs for Original Screenplay and Editing . The Motorcycle Diaries won the Anthony Asquith Award for Achievement in Film Music and Film Not in the English Language .

The Alexander Korda Award for the Outstanding British Film of the Year was given to My Summer of Love and Amma Asante won the Carl Foreman Award for special achievement by a British Director, Producer or Writer in their first feature film for A Way of Life, which she wrote and directed.

Clive Owen won the BAFTA for Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance in Closer , Sideways won the BAFTA for Adapted Screenplay , The Day After Tomorrow won the Award for Achievement in Special Visual Effects and Collateral won for Cinematography .

The Short Film BAFTA was won by The Banker and Birthday Boy won the Award for Short Animation .

The Orange Film of the Year, the only award presented at the ceremony that is voted for by members of the public, went to Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban .

The composer John Barry was honoured with the Academy Fellowship. Awarded annually in the Gift of Council, the Fellowship is the highest accolade bestowed by The Academy. John has been BAFTA nominated on numerous occasions and won the Anthony Asquith BAFTA Award for The Lion In Winter.



Angela Allen was this year's recipient of the Michael Balcon Award for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema . The Award has been given since 1978 in memory of one of the founder members of the British Academy. Angela has enjoyed an illustrious career as a script supervisor and worked with John Huston on many films, including The African Queen, The Misfits and Wise Blood. Since forming a highly successful working relationship with Franco Zeffirelli, her work has included Tea with Mussolini , Jane Eyre and the recent Callas Forever .

The Awards were hosted for the fifth time by Stephen Fry and took place on Saturday 12th February at the Odeon, Leicester Square. They were produced by Initial (part of Endemol UK) and broadcast on BBC ONE the same evening.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 02:03 pm
Smorgs, fantastic report. I am loathe to admit that I am not familiar with so many things that are a part of your small island. <smile>Thank you, my dear.

Listeners, please continue to stay tuned to WA2K radio. I have enjoyed the learning experience, the news, the music, and the breath of fresh air from all those involved.

We are all a majority of one, and yet we are all in it together.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 03:09 pm
Thought for Today: ``Love that's wise will not say all it means.'' - Edwin Arlington Robinson, American poet (1869-1935).

One of my all time favorite poets. and that, listeners, is philosophy in a nut shell.
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 10:01 pm
I used to read Robinson a bit, but don't read many poets anymore.
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edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 10:08 pm
Here is Gogi Grant's one hit record

Wayward Wind - Gogi Grant

[Words and Music by Stan Lebowsky and Herb Newman]

The wayward wind is a restless wind
A restless wind that yearns to wander
And he was born the next of kin
The next of kin to the wayward wind

In a lonely shack by a railroad track
He spent his younger days
And I guess the sound of the outward-bound
Made him a slave to his wand'rin ways

And the wayward wind is a restless wind
A restless wind that yearns to wander
And he was born the next of kin
The next of kin to the wayward wind


Oh, I met him there in a border town
He vowed we'd never part
Though he tried his best to settle down
I'm now alone with a broken heart

And the wayward wind is a restless wind
A restless wind that yearns to wander
And he was born the next of kin
The next of kin to the wayward wind

The next of kin to the wayward wind
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 10:10 pm
And the only Johnny Ray song I really like


Just Walking In The Rain - Johnnie Ray

Just walking in the rain
Getting soaking wet
Torturing my heart
By trying to forget

Just walking in the rain
So alone and blue
All because my heart
Still remembers you

People come to windows
They always stare at me
Shaking their heads in sorrow
Saying, who can that fool be

Just walking in the rain
Thinking how we met
Knowing things could change
Somehow I can't forget


(Just walking in the rain)
(Walking in the rain)
(Walking in the rain)
(Just walking in the rain)
(All day I)

People come to their windows
They always stare at me
Their shaking their heads in sorrow
Saying, who can that fool be
(Now who can he be)

Just walking in the rain
(Walking in the rain)
Thinking how we met
(Walking in the rain)
Knowing things could change
(Walking in the rain)
Somehow I can't forget
(Walking in the rain)
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Feb, 2005 10:12 pm
And a particular favorite of mine

Moonlight Gambler - Frankie Laine

[Words by Bob Hilliard and Music by Phil Springer]

SPOKEN:
You can gamble for match sticks, you can gamble for gold
The stakes may be heavy or small
But if you haven't gambled for love and lost
You haven't gambled at all

They call me a moonlight gambler
I've gambled for love and lost
When I gamble for love and it isn't in the cards
Oh, what heartaches it can cost me

Win or lose, I'm a moonlight gambler
And a winner is what I long to be
So I'll gamble for love just as long as I live
Till the day Lady Luck smiles at me

You can gamble for match sticks
You can gamble for gold
The stakes may be heavy or small
But if you haven't gambled for love and lost
Then you haven't gambled at all

No, if you haven't gambled for love in the moonlight
Then you haven't gambled at all

So I'll gamble for love just as long as I live
Till the day Lady Luck smiles at me

They call me the moonlight gambler
They call me the moonlight gambler
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 07:54 am
Good morning WA2K Radio audience.

edgar, I especially like that song by Gogi Grant. Johnny Ray was a real popular guy for a while. What was the name of his first big hit? My sister was ga ga over him.

Lobster lovers, you might feel better about this news:

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - A new study out of Norway concludes that it's unlikely lobsters feel pain, stirring up a long-simmering debate over whether Maine's most valuable seafood suffers when it's being cooked.

Animal activists for years have claimed that lobsters feel excruciating agony when they are cooked, and that dropping one in a pot of boiling water is tantamount to torture.

The study, which was funded by the Norwegian government and written by a scientist at the University of Oslo, suggests that lobsters and other invertebrates probably don't suffer even if lobsters do tend to thrash in boiling water.

"Lobsters and crabs have some capacity of learning, but it is unlikely that they can feel pain," the study concluded.

The 39-page report was aimed at determining if invertebrates should be subject to animal welfare legislation as Norway revises its animal welfare law. The report looked at invertebrate groups such as insects, crustaceans, worms and mollusks and summarized the scientific literature dealing with feelings and pain among those creatures without backbones.

It concluded that most invertebrates - including lobsters, crabs, worms, snails, slugs and clams - probably don't have the capacity to feel pain.

Lobster biologists in Maine have maintained for years that the lobster's primitive nervous system and underdeveloped brain are similar to that of an insect. While lobsters react to different stimuli, such as boiling water, the reactions are escape mechanisms, not a conscious response or an indication of pain, they say.

The Norwegian report backs up a study in the early 1990s at the University of Maine and reinforces what people in the lobster industry have always contended, said Bob Bayer, executive director of the Lobster Institute, a research and education organization in Orono.

"We've maintained all along that the lobster doesn't have the ability to process pain," Bayer said.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, an animal rights organization based in Norfolk, Va., has made lobster pain part of its Fish Empathy Project, putting out stickers and pamphlets with slogans like, "Being Boiled Hurts. Let Lobsters Live."

PETA regularly demonstrates at the Maine Lobster Festival in Rockland, and 10 years ago placed a full-page ad in a Rockland newspaper featuring an open letter from actress Mary Tyler Moore urging festival-goers to forego lobster.

"If we had to drop live pigs or chickens into scalding water, chances are that few of us would eat them. Why should it be any different for lobsters?" the ad read.

PETA's Karin Robertson called the Norwegian study biased, saying the government doesn't want to hurt the country's fishing industry.

"This is exactly like the tobacco industry claiming that smoking doesn't cause cancer," she said.

Robertson said many scientists believe lobsters do indeed feel pain. For instance, a zoologist with The Humane Society of the United States made a written declaration that lobsters can feel pain after a chef dismembered and sauteed a live lobster to prepare a Lobster Fra Diavolo dish on NBC's "Today" show in 1994.

But Mike Loughlin, who studied the boiling of lobsters when he was a University of Maine graduate student, said lobsters simply lack the brain capacity to feel pain.

"It's a semantic thing: No brain, no pain," said Loughlin, who now works as a biologist at the Maine Atlantic Salmon Commission.

It's debatable whether the debate will ever be resolved.

The Norwegian study, even while saying it's unlikely that crustaceans feel pain, also cautioned that more research is needed because there is a scarcity of scientific knowledge on the subject.

Whether lobsters feel pain or not, many consumers will always hesitate at placing lobsters in boiling pots of water. New Englanders may feel comfortable cooking their lobsters, but people outside the region often feel uneasy about boiling a live creature, said Kristen Millar, executive director of the Maine Lobster Promotion Council. "Consumers don't generally greet and meet an animal before they eat it," she said.

___

On the Net:

Lobster Institute: www.lobsterinstitute.org

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals: www.peta.org

Soooooo. The next time you drop a lobster in a pot, just ignore their screams and scratching. Rolling Eyes




.
0 Replies
 
eoe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 07:59 am
Good morning everyone! Here's your schedule for todays 31 Days of Oscar on Turner Classic Movies:

Tuesday, February 15
Costume Design

6:00 AM Gate of Hell ('53)
7:30 AM Seven Samurai ('54)
11:00 AM It Should Happen to You ('54)
12:30 PM Raintree County ('57)
4:00 PM Gambit ('66)
6:00 PM Midnight Lace ('60)
8:00 PM Guys and Dolls ('55)
11:00PM Dr. Zhivago ('65)
2:30AM Hawaii

and in honor of one of our most distinguished movie fashionistas:

http://www.themakeupgallery.info/images/disguise/wigs/w1/gambit.jpg

Shirley Maclaine in Gambit

Lobster. yummm.......
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 08:17 am
Thanks, eoe. Well, if the Hawaii that you listed is the same one that I saw many years ago after reading the book, I think I won't mind missing that one.

Doctor Zhivago was the only movie that I saw first, then read the book, but the scene that involved Omar Shariff in the railroad car, looking through the slats at the moon, was very powerful to me, because it showed that in spite of the horror, the poet emerged.
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 08:28 am
Good Morning all.

I hope EOE is enjoying the TCM movies. I enjoyed Crocodile Dundee (love Paul Hogan and the Dundee theme) and "And Justice for All" with Pacino.

Before I post today's BD celebs, I'd like to dedicate this song to Letty and her sister:

I went walkin' down by the river
Feeling very sad inside
When all at once I saw in the sky
The little white cloud that cried

He told me he was very lonesome
And no one cared if he lived or died
And said sometimes the thunder and lightning
Make all little clouds hide

He said "Have faith in all kinds of weather"
"For the sun will always shine"
"Do your best and always remember"
"The dark clouds pass with time"

He asked if I'd tell all my world
Just how hard those little clouds try
That's how I know I'll always remember
The little white cloud that sat right down and cried
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 09:01 am
Well, my goodness, Raggedy. Thank you for that cloud, crying or no. I think the song that my sister loved the most was something like:

If your sweetheart sends a letter of goodbye,
It's no secret, you'll feel better if you cry.

My word. The man sang that amidst a breaking voice. I seem to recall that he had a hearing problem, as well.
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 09:27 am
Oh yes. I had forgotten all about "Cry". And that song was played on the radio almost every day for at least a year. (lol) Johnny Ray did wear a hearing aid. I remember him playing the member of a show biz family who decided he wanted to be a priest in the movie "There's No Business Like Show Business" The family was Ethel Merman and Dan Dailey as the parents, and Donald O'Connor Mitzi Gaynor and Johnny Ray as their children, with Marilyn Monroe playing O'Connor's love interest. Lots of Irving Berlin songs.

Oh, just found this at IMDb.

"After partially losing his hearing in a youthful accident, he began singing locally in a wild, flamboyant style that soon made him an international sensation. His early songs, such as "Cry" and "The Little White Cloud That Cried", were major hits, but his open bisexuality and brushes with the law caused his star to wane in the US. He remained popular in the UK and Australia until his death, which came after a lifelong intake of pills and liquor."
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Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 10:16 am
Today's Birthday Celebrities:

1564 Galileo Galilei, physicist/astronomer (Pisa, Italy; died 1642)
1809 Cyrus McCormick, inventor of the reaper (Rockbridge County, VA; died 1884)
1820 Susan B. Anthony, women's rights leader (Adams, MA; died 1906)
1882 John Barrymore, actor (Philadelphia, PA; died 1942)
1905 Harold Arlen, composer/songwriter (Buffalo, NY; died 1986)
1914 Kevin McCarthy, actor (Seattle, WA)
1927 Harvey Korman, actor/comedian (Chicago, IL)
1931 Claire Bloom, actress (London, England)
1935 Susan Brownmiller, feminist author (Brooklyn, NY)
1951 Melissa Manchester, singer (Bronx, NY)
Jane Seymour, actress (Middlesex, England)
1954 Matt Groening, cartoonist and creator of The Simpsons (Portland, OR)
1964 Chris Farley, comedian/actor (Madison, WI; died 1997)

Thanks to Harold Arlen for "Over the Rainbow" -- and Stormy Weather; Blues in the Night; Come Rain or Come Shine; I Love a Parade; Any Place I Hang My Hat is Home, etc. He wrote close to 200 songs.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 10:53 am
Gorsh, Raggedy. Thanks for the info concerning Johnny Ray. That's very sad, really. I understand that "Over the Rainbow" was almost cut from The Wizard of Oz.

Quite a family, the Barrymores. Wasn't there a book written called The Prince of Players, concerning John? Perhaps our listeners will know.
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 15 Feb, 2005 11:57 am
Letty: I must answer this one because The Prince of Players with Richard Burton is another movie on my long list of all time favorites. It is the story of actor Edwin Booth, brother of the infamous John Wilkes Booth.
0 Replies
 
 

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