Category Archives: Books Music Movies & Entertainment

Book reviews, music news, movie trailers, and other entertainment.

First Look of Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs

“Jobs,” Joshua Michael Stern’s biopic of Steve Jobs, starring Ashton Kutcher, has been selected as the closing-night film at Sundance.

apple, steve jobs, ashton kutcher

(via)

Related:
Steve Jobs’s yacht
Steve Jobs posing in front of IBM HQ.

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MERRY DMX-MAS

DMX does us the honors of spittin’ Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.


(via)

Wasn’t that great. DMX should be the spokesperson for Mucinex.

Buy DMX music here.

Indian Talent Show Escalates Quickly

Warriors of Goja are pretty nuts. Watch if you can. The music gives it a hint of creepiness.

Thanks Jr.

Exclusive photos from the set of the new Hunger Games movie Catching Fire

Jennifer Lawrence

Photo: mockingjay.net

Here are some exclusive behind the scenes images from the set of the second movie, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.

The stars include: Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Lenny Kravitz, Elizabeth Banks, Stanley Tucci, Donald Sutherland, Willow Shields, Toby Jones, and Woody Harrelson return in their roles from the first film. New to the Games (so far) are Jeffrey Wright, Sam Claflin, Alan Ritchson, Stephanie Leigh Schlund, Patrick St. Esprit, Jena Malone, Lynn Cohen, Bruno Gunn, Meta Golding, E. Roger Mitchell, Maria Howell, Amanda Plummer, and Philip Seymour Hoffman.

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is being directed by Francis Lawrence. The film’s release date is November 22, 2013. Buy the books here.

Source: Images from http://mockingjay.net

I don’t do Karate, I do Kar-azay

"I don't do Karate, I do Kar-azay."

“I don’t do Karate, I do Kar-azay.” Bernice

Quite possibly the best piece of reality television I have seen all year. If you haven’t tuned in to South Beach Tow, you need to. Wednesday’s at 9:30 on TruTV.

Slaying in a winter wonderland

Heavy metal giants Slayer are selling a Christmas sweater that is covered is recognizable hardcore Slayer artwork, colors and icons that also allows the wearer to show off their Christmas spirit. It is available to purchase on the Slayer official merchandise store (currently sold out).

Slayer are selling a Christmas sweater.

image via Slayer official merchandise store

(via Metal Hammer)

Daniel Craig with long hair

Long before he became Bond, Daniel Craig was in the British TV drama Our Friends In The North (1996).


He kinda looks like he could be a vampire in Twilight.
(via The Gloss)

Classic Reno 911

Reno 911

(via)

Buy Reno 911 on DVD.

Children’s books today

The Night Dad Went to Jail; What to Expect When Someone You Love Goes to Jail (Life’s Challenges).

Go buy a copy here.

Related:
Best Books of 2012
Naughty quilting book
A book that ruins marriages

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Best Books of 2012

1. “The Round House” by Louise Erdrich: Likely to be dubbed the Native American “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Erdrich’s moving, complex and surprisingly uplifting new novel tells of a boy’s coming of age in the wake of a brutal, racist attack on his mother.
2. “The Yellow Birds: A Novel” by Kevin Powers: With this compact and emotional debut novel, Iraq War veteran Powers eyes the casual violence of war with a poet’s precision, moving confidently between scenes of blunt atrocity and almost hallucinatory detachment.
3. “Gone Girl: A Novel” by Gillian Flynn: Masterfully plotted from start to finish, the suspense doesn’t waver for one page. It’s one of those books you will feel the need to discuss immediately after finishing. The ending punches you in the gut.
4. “The End of Your Life Book Club” by Will Schwalbe: As much an homage to literature as to the mother who shared it with him, Schwalbe’s chronicling of his mother’s death to cancer—they wait, they talk, they read together—is nothing less than captivating.
5. “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk: A Novel” by Ben Fountain: Debut novelist Fountain follows a squad of marines as they engage in a “victory tour” in the States. Set mostly during halftime at a Dallas Cowboy’s football game, Fountain skillfully illustrates what it’s like to go to war, and how bizarre and disconcerting it can be for these grunts to return from combat to the country they love.
6. “Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity” by Katherine Boo: This searing portrait of life in a Mumbai slum reads like a novel, but it’s all-too-true. Pulitzer Prize-winner Boo’s writing is superb, and the depth and courage of her reporting from this hidden world is astonishing.
7. “A Hologram for the King” by Dave Eggers: Both disturbing and funny, this novel from onetime wunderkind Eggers shows surprising depth. A man’s wayward attempt to find himself and retake his life delivers him to Saudi Arabia but the journey abroad is also internal, and it ends up saying as much about life in America as in the Middle East.
8. “The Middlesteins: A Novel” by Jami Attenberg: A quick read that’s more complex than it seems at first, this story about a Midwestern Jewish family is both recognizable (sometimes uncomfortably so) and entertainingly idiosyncratic.
9. “Mortality” by Christopher Hitchens: Like the late author himself, this book is funny, smart, entertaining and unflinching to the end. “Mortality” has the power to change ideas that you might have held immutable—which is one of the best things you can say about a book.
10. “The Fault in Our Stars” by John Green: This soulful novel originally written for teenagers tackles big subjects—life, death, love—with the perfect blend of levity and heart-swelling emotion.

Have you read any of these books? What did they miss?

Buy any of these books on Amazon here.