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Posts Tagged ‘hollywood

Salma is Forbes’ Sexiest Woman

11:07 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Magazines|Women · Comments Off

17 Jul 2007

salma.jpgI’m not sure when it was that Forbes went from rating rich CEOs to Hollywood bombshells, but last week they released a list of Hollywood’s Sexiest Women. According to them — and they should know (?) — Salma Hayek is the sexiest woman in show business.

After Salma at #1, the list gets a bit debatable. Carmen Electra and Jessica Alba tie for number two. Then the list goes on:

4. Shakira

5. Beyonce/Halle Berry/Eva Longoria (tie)

8. Catherine Zeta Jones

9. Elizabeth Hurley/Raquel Welch/Jessica Biel (tie)

12. JLo/Alyssa Milano (tie)

14. Pamela Anderson/Angelina Jolie (tie)

Is it just me or does this list seem like it’s from 2001? Pamela Anderson is tied with Angelina Jolie? Elizabeth Hurley tied with Jessica Biel? I guess that’s what you get when you have a business magazine do fluff pieces. Just weird.

Via / Forbes

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hollywood_sign_cp_86747.jpgNo hoorays for Hollywood. Hispanic Tips linked to a story today with the headline “Study: Whites get majority of acting jobs” and added “is anyone surprised by these findings?” My answer is no, not surprising. Even with more Latino, blacks and Asians in television and film these days, it’s clear to anyone that whites dominate the entertainment business. According to the UCLA study:

Ethnic minorities were not cast in about 80 percent of first-, second- and third-billed leading roles in Hollywood films last year, according to a study released Wednesday.

This level of representation of Latino, black, Asian-American and American Indian actors is based on a review of the 171 commercially released films in 2005 that reported a gross of at least $1 million.

In addition, the first-time study from the UCLA School of Law and the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center showed that 69 percent of all casting notices for three months this summer specifically asked for white actors. Roles advertised for a specific ethnicity other than whites ranged from 0.5 percent to 8 percent of the total, it found.

Also during that three-month period, white actors could compete with minorities for an additional 8.5 percent of total parts – beyond the nearly 70 percent that specifically sought white actors.

Read more…

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Where are the Hollywood stars when you need them?

5:03 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Celebrities|Immigration · Comments Off

13 Apr 2006

kanye.jpgActors and other performers — Latino or not — are shutting up about the immigration issue. AP reports on how, with a few rare exceptions (George Lopez, EJ Olmos, and Eva Longoria), Hollywood is keeping its trap shut with regard to this hot button issue for fear of “career suicide”:

Fear of career damage, confusion over a complex issue abruptly supercharged by waves of nationwide protests, and historic detachment from Hispanic realities are among the explanations offered by industry insiders and observers.

Not that the movement has needed famous standard bearers – it has been notable for its bottom-up genesis that has left it without recognizable leaders.

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Latino Oscar nods

6:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Entertainment|Movies · 2 Comments

31 Jan 2006

03rev6.jpgJust a couple of Latino names on the Oscar nominee list this year:

Rodrigo Prieto
(Mexico), Best Cinematography for Brokeback Mountain

Emmanuel Lubezki
(Mexico) Best Cinematography for The New World

Gustavo Santalolla (Argentina) Best Soundtrack for Brokeback Mountain

If you like, you can also throw in “honorary Latino” Joaquin Phoenix (actor, “Walk the Line”) and Spaniard Alberto Iglesias (soundtrack, “The Constant Gardener”) para hacer bulto.

Via / MSN Latino

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Eva Longoria: Lalaland’s new tourism ambassador

7:29 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Los Angeles|Marketing · Comments Off

18 Nov 2005

evalongoria1.jpgI thought Eva Longoria was a proud Texican…or at least that’s what she’s always playing up in interviews. I thought she hated Hollywood. Didn’t she say

“I’m just a Texan through and through. I want to move back to Texas as soon as I’m done with the show, whenever that is. You know, I’m never followed by paparazzi in San Antonio.”

But wave some dinero in her face and give her a chance to plug her latest venture and she’ll say this:

“It doesn’t get better than driving down Sunset Boulevard and catching a comedy show like ‘Hot Tamales Live’” she says, referring to the all-female comedy variety show she co-produces at the Comedy Store, located on the Sunset Strip.

Longoria says, “Los Angeles is a great place to live, work and play. I am excited to be part of an effort to promote LA to visitors from around the world.”

Via / The Post Chronicle

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Say it ain’t so: Omar Sharif a racist?

6:13 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities · Comments Off

28 Oct 2005

omar_sharif_.jpgI fell in love with Omar Sharif in the sickeningly romantic 60s epic “Doctor Zhivago”. I really, really hope what I am reading is just a rumor:

A Latino American named Juan Anderson has filed a lawsuit against internationally well-known Egyptian actor Omar El Sharif accusing him of being a racist.

Juan claimed that a verbal fight had broken out between him and Omar outside a restaurant in Los Angeles, when the actor tried to bribe him with 20 Euros in order to park his Porsche in front of the restaurant.

Anderson added that during the fight, Omar had called him a “Stupid Mexican” several times and had ordered his driver to drive the car towards Anderson who was trying to stall the actor until the police arrived.

On his part, Omar’s lawyer denied that the actor made such remarks and considered the entire lawsuit as silly, adding that there were many witnesses who can prove that Omar did not commit any racial crime.

How can anyone with such sweet little doe eyes be filled with hate? More importantly, why do actors risk these types of rumors getting out, knowing that a large part of their fan base will feel isolated? He was in L.A., for christ’s sake. Well, if Omar is a racist I’ll be disappointed, but I’m sure he’s just one of many. Ironically, the first one that comes to mind is Brigitte Bardot, whose disgusting comments were directed toward Omar’s own people.

In the words of the immortal Karen Carpenter “can’t we stop hurting each other?” Think about THAT over the weekend. Peace.

Via / Al Bawaba

Update: The “Mexican” (who is Guatemalan) is suing him.

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The exporting of novelas

12:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · TV · 2 Comments

14 Oct 2005

maria155.jpg You know novelas are getting bigger than everyone ever imagined when mainstream media starts writing about them. I mean, novelas? These Latin American works of art are in a class all by themselves. They are the opposite of Hollywood. They are unpretentious. They don’t pretend to have the greatest actors, the best scripts or even sets that look real. As non-Hollywood as they are, the Hollywood Reporter is reporting on them today:

Four decades ago, who would have imagined that Mexican novelas would be seen in such far-flung places as Russia, Indonesia and Slovenia? But today, more than 100 countries import Mexico’s steamy soaps, Spanish broadcasters say.

Hollywood is only just now realizing the novela’s international appeal and ability to create addiction outside of Spanish-speaking countries. The rest of us know that Veronica Castro has been HUGE in Russia for over 20 years, and Thalia is, and will always be, the honorary daughter and darling of the Philippines, where “Maria Mercedes” and the rest of her novelas are dubbed into Pilipino. International appeal, because the storylines are international. A rise to the top by someone down in the dumps, some bitch that wants to steal your boyfriend and will stop at nothing to eliminate you, a child you were forced to leave behind but are determined to get back once you finally make it big. Stories as old as storytelling itself, and drama in the true sense of the word.

We love to hate the acting, we laugh when we should cry at them, we think they are trashy but deep down or shamelessly, we love them. The novela has a strange appeal. Someone who is a self-proclaimed film snob or claims to never watch TV can be hooked in just one episode. Even people who don’t speak a word of Spanish get hooked. So predictable, I think that’s where the novela’s appeal lies: in how comfortable we feel when we are watching them. We know Thalia from the barrio is going to marry rich Fernando Colunga at the end, and that after that she’ll still have to fight for her rightful place in a society that still sees her as scum. She’ll lose little baby Nandito but don’t worry, she’ll get him back. Along the way she’ll also gain some respect. Always pulling for the underdog, we are, comforted in knowing she’ll triumph and knowing that no matter how high she rises she won’t forget her roots. Isn’t that what we all wish for ourselves?

Via / The Hollywood Reporter

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