Thursday, January 31, 2008

Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/31/2008

Underscoring why he evoked a unique feeling of disdain and animosity around the NBA, Bill Laimbeer once admitted: "I don't fight. I agitate and walk away."

Birthdays:
Jackie Robinson b. 1919
Hank Aguirre b. 1931
Ernie Banks b. 1931
Camille "the Eel" Henry b. 1933
Nolan Ryan b. 1947

1999:
In what turned out to be the last game of his career, Denver quarterback John Elway racked up 336 passing yards and led the Broncos to their second consecutive Super Bowl triumph, a 34-19 drubbing of Atlanta. Elway was given the game's MVP award.

"The man has always had a flair for the fantastic finish. Had he retired after last season, when he won his first Super Bowl in four tries, despite a lukewarm performance against the Green Bay Packers, Elway's finale would have been heartwarming. If Sunday's game was indeed his last, he will have gone out in a blaze of glory. -Michael Silver, February 8, 1999


MEMOIR

In 1980, Jennie Erdal was a mousy, nerdy, struggling single mother of three, barely making a living in Scotland by translating Boris Pasternak. No one was more surprised than she when she was given a chance—and took it, for 15 years—to exchange this honorable but lackluster life for a tumultuous, highly paid, and morally dubious career as a ghostwriter in London for an improbably colorful publisher called Tiger. The strange dependency that emerges between Erdal and Tiger, and the ghostwriter’s struggle to find her own voice, are almost stranger than fiction.

GHOSTING: A DOUBLE LIFE, by Jennie Erdal (Doubleday, 2005)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/30/2008

1/30/2005:
Marat Safin of Russia spoils the party Down Under, beating crowd favorite Lleyton Hewitt of Australia in the finals of the Australian Open at Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne. After Hewitt briskly wins the first set, 6-1, Safin takes control with his powerful serve and volley and runs out the match, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Safin was a losing finalist here in 2002 and '04, but today he prevents Hewitt from becoming the first Aussie to win the title in three decades.

Birthdays:
Walt Dropo b. 1923
Davey Johnson b. 1943
Curtis Strange b. 1955
Payne Stewart b. 1957
Jalen Rose b. 1973

1999:
Michelle Akers scored the 100th international goal of her illustrious soccer career as the U.S. women's national team blanked Portugal, 6-0, in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

"Forget Margaret Thatcher. If there was ever a woman deserving fo the nickname Iron Lady, it's U.S. midfielder Michelle Akers. In her fourteen yeras with the national team, Akers, 33, has been the Lenny Dykstra of women's soccer, crashing into defenders, cross-checking attackers, hurtling headlong for the good of the team-and the bad of her body. -Grant Wahl, May 3, 1999

Packers Fact:
With 53,615 career passing yards entering 2006, Brett Favre trailed only Dan Marino (61,361) on the NFL's all-time list.


Few writers have so utterly taken possession of a particular niche as Alan Furst has of the shadowy corners of World War II Europe. In Furst’s sixth journey into 1940s darkness, Jean Casson, a movie producer, negotiates the difficult Paris terrain between the French Resistance and its momentary allies, the Communists. How did he do it? “He pulled Hélène tighter against him. Crazy to take off all our clothes—to make love like aristocrats.” Furst gives us the war as it should have been, a romantically gritty world that’s easy to live in for some 200 pages.

RED GOLD, by Alan Furst (Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2001)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/29/2008

1/29/1965:
Defending collegiate champion UCLA and nationally ranked Wichita State are both upset in an intersectional doubleheader at Chicago Stadium. The Iowa Hawkeyes surprise UCLA, 87-82, in the nightcap of the twin bill after the Loyola (Chicago) Ramblers nipped Wichita State, 93-92, in the opener despite 45 points by Dave "the Rave" Stallworth of the Wheatshockers. UCLA and Wichita State are on a collision course, bound for the NCAA tournament semifinals at Portland, Oregon, where the Bruins will grab a 108-89 victory en route to their second straight national title.

Birthdays:
Greg Louganis b. 1960
Steve Sax b. 1960
Andre Reed b. 1964
Dominik Hasek b. 1965
Sean Burke b. 1967

1989:
Mark O'Meara won the National Pro-Am title at Pebble Beach, Calif. O'Meara will win this championship four times during his professional golfing career.

"There are three rules at the National Pro-Am. Never eat the cashews in your room at the Lodge at Pebble Beach. (They are $10 a jar.) Never expect to get Jack Lemmon's autograph on Sunday. (He has now missed the cut 25 years straight.) And never bet against Mark O'Meara. -Rick Reilly, February 6, 1989

FICTION UPON FICTION

In Slow Man, Coetzee, a Nobel Prize-winning author, treats us to literature with a capital L. Retired photographer Paul Rayment loses his leg in a bicycling accident and during his long recuperation reflects on what he considers a wasted life. With the appearance of a Croatian nurse, his spirits lift, and he engages, through her and her son, with life again. As he struggles with how to express his feelings for her, who should arrive upon the scene but the eminent writer Elizabeth Costello, the eponymous character of an earlier Coetzee novel. Now the book becomes something else altogether, a postmodern excursion into the theme of writing itself. This isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but if it’s yours, you are sure to enjoy Coetzee’s appealing mastery of word and idea.

SLOW MAN, by J. M. Coetzee (Viking, 2005)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/28/2008

1/28/1967:
Two world indoor records are set and a third tied at an invitationsl track meet at Albuquerque, New Mexico. Bob Seagren of USC betters his own record by pole-vaulting 17'2". Theoron Lewis, formerly of Southern University, sets a record of 47.1 seconds in the 440-yard dash, breaking Wendell Motley's mark of 47.3 set just last year. Jim Hines of Texas Southern University ties the 60-yard dash record of 5.9 seconds, the third time he's achieved that clocking. Seagren, in the pole vault, and Hines, in the 100-meter dash, are destined to win gold medals next year at the Olympic Games in Mexico City.

Birthdays:
Pete Runnels b. 1928
Colin Campbell b. 1953
Tony Delk b. 1974
Jermaine Dye b. 1974
Daunte Culpepper b. 1977

1984:
Larry Nancy won the first NBA Slam-Dunk Contest.

"The dunk has assumed an importance that far exceeds its role in the game. Defense and team play are nice, but did you see that punk-funk-get-outta-the-way-cuz'-it's-turnin'-all-others-to-junk dunk? A slam dunk is a manifestation of a player's soul, one that his peers appreciate as much as the fans." -Anthony Cotton, February 6, 1984

Packers Fact:
As a nine-month old infant, Ahman Green needed a blood transfusion and spent three weeks in the hospital while recovering from the near-deadly intestinal disease Shigelia.


FASCINATING NONFICTION

In 1951, 23-year-old Che Guevara set off on an eight-month journey through South America with his friend Alberto Granado on his motorcycle, La Poderosa II (The Mighty One). His journal from the trip was translated in 1996 as The Motorcycle Diaries. The inner landscape of the young man is as varied and surprising as the geography he traverses on the increasingly less mighty motorcycle, from Argentina to Chile, Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia: Poetry gives way to lust, macho bravado to social consciousness, friendship to rivalry, exhaustion to joy, riding to walking. The book is rich and thoughtful, offering a unique look at one of modern history’s most charismatic and enigmatic figures.

THE MOTORCYCLE DIARIES: NOTES ON A LATIN AMERICAN JOURNEY, by Ernesto Che Guevara (Ocean Press, 2003)

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Sunday, January 27, 2008

Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/27/2008

1/27/1993:
Trailling 73-54 with nine minutes left, the North Carolina Tar Heels stage a miraculous rally, closing the game on a 28-4 run to shock Florida State, 82-77, at the Dean Dome in Chapel Hill. A flurry of three-point shots, 14 second-half FSU turnovers and a badly timed technical foul called against the Seminoles coach Pat Kennedy help Carolina erase the large deficit in a matter of minutes, and four late free throws by Donald Williams salt away the unlikely triumph. In two months, after fashioning a 34-4 record, UNC will win the national championship.

Birthdays:
Frankie Albert b. 1920
John Lowenstein b. 1947
Billy "White Shoes" Johnson b. 1952
Cris Collinsworth b. 1959
Marat Safin b. 1980


In Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, Mr. March was the absent father who was based in part on Bronson Alcott, Louisa May’s father. In Geraldine Brooks’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, we learn that March has become a Union chaplain and then a teacher of “contraband” slaves. His letters home are cheerful, but the reader knows that he is hiding the truth from the family. He experiences firsthand the suffering of the war and feels the futility of his efforts to ameliorate it. Mr. March has his own inner conflicts as well, and by the end of the novel he is a changed man. “It feels honorable, elegant and true—an adult coda to the plangent idealism of Little Women,” said John Freeman in The Wall Street Journal.

MARCH, by Geraldine Brooks (Penguin, 2006)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/26/2008

1/26/1950:
Citations' record 16-race winning streak is snapped by a little-known Argentinian colt named Miche at Santa Anita. This was only Citation's second outing since winning 19 of 20 races and the Triple Crown in 1948 and then sitting out last year with leg injuries. Known as the Calumet Cannonball, Citation grabs the early lead but does not sustain it. Miche, a 14-1 shot, matches Citation stride for stride down the stretch and wins by a neck. It's only Citation's third loss in 31 lifetime starts, all of them at the short distance of six furlongs (three-quarters of a mile).

Birthdays:
Bob Uecker b. 1935
Jack Youngblood b. 1950
Brian Doyle b. 1955
Wayne Gretzky b. 1961
Vince Carter b. 1977

1996:
Monica Seles beat Anke Huber and won her fourth Australian Open title. It was Seles' first major championship since having been stabbed four years earlier.

"Her ground strokes lacked their usual force; her shots weren't scraping the lines...She huffed around the court, out of shape. It didn't matter. Seles possesses something more important than a gym-perfect body; she is a pure competitor, with athletic gifts that have nothing to do with muscle. -S.L. Price, February 5, 1996


Two bestselling authors, one of chick lit and the other of action-adventure yarns, have blended their specialties into a stew of a book that includes moviemaking, helicopters, a precocious five-year-old named Pepper, an ex-husband, and a Green Beret captain. Romantic Times made it a Top Pick and said, “Bless the day that Crusie and Mayer sat down to chat, for this collaboration is inspired! All of the humor and irony from Crusie’s previous books is here in full force, but now it’s ratcheted up with a male action-adventure perspective.”

DON’T LOOK DOWN, by Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer (St. Martin’s Press, 2006)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/25/2008

1/25/1967:
Gracious, unassuming and much-beloved New York Rangers defenseman Harry Howell is showered with gifts and tributes on a "Night" in his honor at Madison Square Garden. The special occasion coincides with his 1,000th NHL game (played earlier this week) and his first All-Star Game selection (announced today). Howell's steady defensive efforts and fan-friendly demeanor served to buttress the Rangers through several non-playoff years. In the game that follows, he assists on the first Ranger goal and Bob Nevin scores the winner with seven minutes left as New York edges Boston, 2-1.

Birthdays:
Lou Groza b. 1924
Don Maynard b. 1937
Steve Prefontaine b. 1951
Mark Duper b. 1959
Chris Chelios b. 1962


1987:
Quarterback Phil Simms led the New York Giants to a 39-20 victory over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXI, the Giants first title since 1956. Simms set a Super Bowl record for passing accuracy and was named the game's Most Valuable Player.

"Somewhere inside the mind of every quarterback there's a 22-for-25 day, a day when every pass has eyes and every decision is correct. [But] that's where the fantasy usually stays, inside, because nobody ever goes 22 for 25 in a game like the Super Bowl. -Paul Zimmerman, February 2, 1987


Packers Fact:
Defensive lineman Cullen Jenkins is the younger brother of Panthers defensive tackle Kris Jenkins.


POPULAR FICTION

Steve Berry brings a fast-moving thriller to bear on the fascinating world of the Knights Templar, with a lost treasure and plenty of secrets for former Justice Department agent Cotton Malone to chew on. If you liked The Da Vinci Code and can’t get enough of those megalomaniacal pre-Renaissance bad boys, you’ll enjoy this high-action romp by the author of The Amber Room, The Third Secret, and The Romanov Prophecy.

THE TEMPLAR LEGACY, by Steve Berry (Ballantine Books, 2006)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/24/2008

1/24/1998:
After tying Vancouver's NBA record 23-game losing streak recorded two seasons ago, the Denver Nuggets end their losing ways, beating the Los Angeles Clippers, 99-81. Ironically, the head coach of the Grizzlies at that time, Brian Winters, is now an assistant coach with Denver. The Nuggets' most recent win before this was also against the Clippers, seven weeks ago. Frankly, not too many fans have been agonizing over the 3-8 Nuggets' plight in the Mile High City, what with the Broncos' march to the Super Bowl. Led by John Elway, Denver will beat Green Bay tomorrow, 31-24, at San Diego for their first-ever NFL championship.

Birthdays:
Giorgio Chinaglia b. 1947
Atlee Hammaker b. 1958
Rob Dibble b. 1964
Mary Lou Retton b. 1968
Tshimanga Biakabutuka b. 1974


1982:
The San Francisco 49ers defeated the Cincinnati Bengals, 26-21, in Super Bowl XVI. The game's Most Valuable Player was quarterback Joe Montana, who won the award three times while leading the 49ers to four championships.

"Montana's true value is as the perfect quarterback for the Bill Walsh system, which relies on his ability to stay cool under fire and dodge the first emissary of the pass rush, and his resourcefulness in picking out the one receiver who will inevitably get free." -Paul Zimmerman, January 25, 1982


FIDDLER’S FANCY

Was it the varnish that made a Strad sound so glorious? The wood accidentally soaked in seawater? We still don’t know. But we do know that the Strad’s sound has yet to be equaled. In this smart and engaging book, Faber follows the careers of five violins and one cello down through the centuries and in the process we are treated to a history of Stradivari’s genius. We can also savor the instrument’s development, how violins are made, and a discussion of the musicians who have owned and played some of the 1,000 instruments Stradivari made, of which 600 remain.

STRADIVARI’S GENIUS: FIVE VIOLINS, ONE CELLO, AND THREE CENTURIES OF ENDURING PERFECTION, by Toby Faber (Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2006)

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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/23/2008

1/23/1958:
The Red Sox strike gold when they acquire second baseman Pete Runnels from the Washington Senators for Albie Pearson and Norm Zauchin. The resourceful left-handed batter becomes a master at hitting to the opposite field, rifling hits off the Green Monster at Fenway Park. After averaging .274 and 18 doubles per season in seven years at Washington, Runnels will average .320 with 29 doubles per season in his five years at Boston, winning two batting titles, in 1960 and '62.

Birthdays:

Jerry Kramer b. 1936
Petr Korda b. 1968
Eric Metcalf b. 1968
Alan Embree b. 1970
Erubiel Durazo b. 1974

1983:
At the height of his career, 26-year-old tennis player Bjorn Borg announced his retirement. He had won a record five straight Wimbledon titles.

"The announcement at the end of Presley concerts used to be so agonizingly final: "Elvis has left the building." Why, oh why, couldn't Bjorn Borg go out like Ted Williams, hitting the home run, instead of like Presley, wallowing in self-caricature? -Curry Kirkpatrick, February 14, 1983

Packers Fact:
Defensive end Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila is the older brother of former NFL defensive end Akbar Gbaja-Biamila.


Durrell claimed his famous tetralogy was based on Einsteinian physics: three spatial dimensions (Justine, Balthazar, and Mountolive relating the same events from different perspectives) and one temporal (Clea continuing on, showing what happened next). After Joyce, Woolf, and Proust, it might have seemed the next logical experiment with fiction—and the tetralogy was a critical and commercial success when it appeared nearly 50 years ago, but has it aged well? Yes. Durrell’s prose remains impressive; Alexandria is addictively, seedily fascinating and the mysteries of sex and love are still poignant.

THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET: JUSTINE, BALTHAZAR, MOUNTOLIVE, AND CLEA, by Lawrence Durrell (1957-60; Penguin, 1991)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/22/2008

1/22/1989:
Unbeaten Illinois scores 13 unanswered points in the second overtime to run away from Georgia Tech, 103-92, at Assembly Hall in Champaign on a Super Bowl Sunday. The come-from-behind triumph (trailing by 16 in the second half) gives the Fighting Illini (17-0) the top spot in the wire-service polls due out later this week. Kenny Battle, Kendall Gill, Nick Anderson and Steve Bardo lead the Illinois rally in regulation time, and when three Georgia Tech starters foul out during the overtime sessions, the Yellow Jackets' downfall is assured.

Birthdays:
Elmer Lach b. 1918
J.C. Tremblay b. 1939
Serge Savard b. 1946
George Foreman b. 1948
Mike Bossy b. 1957

1982:
Edmonton Oilers center Wayne Gretzky added to his growing legacy when he set a National Hockey League record and scored his 61st goal of the season in his team's 50th game.

"Gretzky's anticipation, whether innate or learned, has long been astounding; he always seemed to know what his opponent would do with the puck. And he knew exactly where everyone was on the ice. Ask him where his four teammates were on a given goal, and he could tell you." -E.M. Swift, October 12, 1981



FAVORITES

The title begs the question: Is there ever enough Liebling? This omnibus reader, with selections covering some of A. J. Liebling’s many obsessions—eating, women, the war years, boxing (he coined the phrase “the sweet science”), the press, and Louisiana’s Huey Long—will at least keep you occupied for a few heavenly days with the incomparable prose, wit, and sheer charm of the man. “As Just Enough Liebling proves, [he] sounds as fresh and irreverent and relevant today as he did nearly fifty years ago” (Allan Barra, San Francisco Chronicle).

JUST ENOUGH LIEBLING: CLASSIC WORK BY THE LEGENDARY NEW YORKER WRITER, by A. J. (Abbott Joseph) Liebling; edited and with introduction by David Remnick (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/21/2008

1/21/1968:
The Western Conference scores three fourth-quarter touchdowns to beat the East, 38-20, in the Pro Bowl at Los Angeles. Gale Sayers, Bill Brown and Richie Pettibon (on a 70-yard interception return) all score in the decisive surge for the West. Sayers is named the outstanding offensive performer of the game for the second year in a row. He'll win the award again in 1970 before a series of knee injuries forces his early retirement.

Birthdays:
Jack Nicklaus b. 1940
Johnny Oates b. 1946
Hakeem Olajuwon b. 1963
Detlef Schrempf v. 1963
Rusty Greer b. 1969


1979:
The Dallas Cowboys lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers, 35-31, in Super Box XIII. The play that turned the game occurred in the second half when the Dallas tight end Jackie Smith dropped a pass in the end zone, and the Cowboys settled for a field goal instead of a touchdown.

"Roger Staubach threw to Jackie Smith, who was wide open. However, the ball was low and slightly behind Smith. Staubach says he threw it too softly, and that that's why Smith dropped it. "He was so open I could have punted it to him," said Staubach." -Dan Jenkins, January 29, 1979

Packers Fact:
Brett Favre entered the 2006 season with a string of 12 consecutive seasons with 20 or more touchdown passes. That was the longest such streak in NFL history.


INTO AFRICA

The Poisonwood Bible is one of those novels you enter and then inhabit for the duration. When you finish it, you feel you’ve really been somewhere. Here we travel to the Belgian Congo as it moves through numerous historical crises to eventually become Zaire. Into this world with its very different culture and climate comes Nathan Price of Bethlehem, Georgia, a self-anointed Baptist missionary who brings his wife and four daughters to a place he is completely unable to understand. The women tell the tale, each one brilliantly realized in the way she writes about what she is witnessing. Jane Smiley, in Washington Post Book World, called The Poisonwood Bible “ambitious, successful and beautiful,” and indeed it is.

THE POISONWOOD BIBLE, by Barbara Kingsolver (HarperTorch, 2003)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/20/2008

1/20/1990:
LSU head basketball coach Dale Brown's vision of a huge crowd at the Superdome, a huge payday for homeless charities in the New Orleans area and a huge win for his team is fully realized as the Bengal Tigers rout Notre Dame, 87-64, before a record collegiate crowd of 68,112 fans (since broken). Chris Jackson leads LSU (12-2) with 21 points amidst a carnival atmosphere with the home team leading comfortably all the way.

Birthdays:
Carol Heiss b. 1940
John Naber b. 1956
Ozzie Guillen b. 1964
Ron Harper b. 1964
Brian Giles b. 1971


CHATTERING CLASSES

Conversation isn’t just talk for Stephen Miller. Rather, it is something, to quote Jonathan Swift, like the “greatest, the most lasting, and the most innocent, as well as useful Pleasure of Life.” Miller looks to Swift, Montaigne, Benjamin Franklin, and a host of other clever chatterboxes to reveal the art of conversation at its best, before turning to examine its unhappy state in contemporary America. Miller’s playful style is itself reminiscent of good conversation and makes for a truly entertaining read.

CONVERSATION: A HISTORY OF A DECLINING ART, by Stephen Miller (Yale University Press, 2006)

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Newsblaze.com audio interview with Ron Glass

From Newsblaze.com -
Newsblaze.com audio interview with Ron Glass

Grew up in Evansville, Indiana. Attended High School at St. Francis Seminary, where his nickname was "Big G". He graduated from high school in 1964. He then attended the University of Evansville where he had a double major and received a BA degree in Drama and Literature.

After college he worked in theatre in Minneapolis and worked at many regional theaters in the US and Canada.. He then moved to Hollywood and had numerous guest appearances on television before being cast in the popular sitcom "Barney Miller".

Over his career Ron has received many awards in theatre, and has twice been nominated for Emmy Awards. He currently serves as Chairman of the Board for the "Al Wooten Jr. Heritage Center".

In 2002, Ron landed a role as one of the main characters, Shepherd Book, on Joss Whedon’s hit sci-fi show Firefly. The series only lasted 15 episodes, but it got a huge fan base in in 2005, the continuation movie Serenity was filmed. If there are any future Firefly projects, Ron probably won’t be in them, as his character died in the movie.

Glass reprised his role from Firefly in the film Serenity (2005). Firefly costume designer Shawna Trpcic had originally designed a loose, baggy casual outfit for Shepherd Book to wear on-ship. But when she saw what great shape Ron Glass was in she decided to put him in a tight t-shirt instead to show off his chest.

Click on the link :

http://newsblaze.com/story/20071025060021tsop.nb/newsblaze/TOPSTORY/Top-Stories.html

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Joss comments on the WGA's back channel discussion with the AMPTP

From Unitedhollywood.blogspot.com -
Joss comments on the WGA's back channel discussion with the AMPTP

Joss Whedon said...

I’d actually like to be the guy that rains on this parade. The use of the word "Endgame" is very dangerous. Even if these back-channel discussions are the route to serious negotiations, it could be weeks — months — before anything is resolved. And that’s assuming the AMPTP isn’t about to unveil yet another bullying tactic to draw this out even more. "Endgame" sends the wrong message to the WGA members. We need, now as much as ever, to act as if the strike is NEVER going to end. We need the rage that sends us out onto the picket lines, the passion that makes us look for alternate methods of financing and developing content, and the unity that reminds us how much the studios have taken from the community already by forcing this strike. As far as the WGA is concerned, the studios have not made one decision based on fair business practices. (Funny side-note: they’ve also abused writers as long as there has been filmed entertainment.) Some of the things that have been broken in these last months can never be fixed, some truths about the studios’ power-grubbing inhumanity that can never be forgotten, or laughed over (as they have been for decades).

I’m honestly thrilled about the news. I’m as ready as anyone to get back to telling stories in the media I love. But the studios need to remember that I’m also ready not to.

This is not the end. And it was never a game.

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Buffy s.8, issue 10 "Anywhere but Here": Comicbookbin.com Review

From Slayaliveblog.blogspot.com -
Buffy s.8, issue 10 "Anywhere but Here": Comicbookbin.com Review


Buffy and Willow meet a demon who reveals a dim future, forcing the two to reflect on their past. Meanwhile, back in Scotland, Dawn confides in Xander the deed that led to her mysterious growth spurt.Series creator Joss Whedon writes Buffy Season Eight #10 with veteran Buffy artist Cliff Richards serving as guest penciller.

Praise for "Anywhere but Here"

"Joss Whedon, the man, the myth, the legend, writes the comic with the same genius as he did the show." -Janet Evanovich, New York Times bestselling author of Hard Eight

Recap

We open on page one with a very saucy picture of Buffy sprawled out on a beach. A scene that seems unusual knowing that the slayers are in the begining stages of a war waged onto them by all of man kind...why is Buffy on vacation? The first blurb of text seems to be wondering the same thing as we are, reading simply, "Buffy Summers?". Turning the page, we see a close up of Buffy (with one of the best SMG(P?) likenesses we have seen in season 8). She tells the voice that they better be Daniel Craig (the new James Bond for anyone who lives under a rock, only coming out for new issues of season 8) or they are wasting her time. The next panel reveals that it is indeed Daniel Craig in his infamus blue speedo from Casino Royal. He tells Buffy that she needs sun block. The last panel of this scene is interupted by someone saying "Thats it?" The next panel brings us into the scene we see (beautifuly) depicted on the cover of issue 10. Buffy and Willow are soaring through the air, Willow with a look of ammusement on her face, Buffy, one of apprehnsion and fear. The title of this issue comes into play here as well as we learn that the Daniel Craig fantasy was Buffy’s "anywhere but here" dream scenario. This game harks back to the season 2 episode "The Dark Ages" where Buffy and Willow first played this titular game (I love that!). This scene continues with Willow critising Buffy for her generic James Bond fantasy as they begin their descent.

Next we move on to Xander and Giant Dawn as Xander suprises Dawn with a giant trunk full of clothing. He explains to her that he had some of their "Wiccan Squad" work their mojo on Dawns things to make them her size. In her excitement, Dawn opens the trunk whith Xander still standing on top of it, he falls in and later is freaked out when he lands on top of someting lacy that he assues is Dawns finery but it turns out to be nothing but a cammi.

We now switch back to Willow and Buffy who are in the midst of another anywhere but here game. This time we are in Will’s fantasy. I won’t spoil what it is exactly becuase it is very amusing. Lets just say it involves a certain SNL alumni....

Buffy interupts Willow’s fantasy with a question about Kenedy. Willow answers the question very dodgily and then the two land on the ground (with a thud in Buffy’s case). We see that they landed in front of a small cottage. Outside of the cottage sits a dark haired woman. As a side note, this is the woman who won the Dark Horse MySpace essay contest last year. Her name is Robin. On first glance, she bears a vague resemblance to a young Lucy Lawless (Xena fans rejoice). Here, the naration that we have come to expect in season 8 is briefly picked up by Robin. We learn that she is a watcher. Buffy is confised by this but it is explained that she is not a watcher like Giles, but a watcher of this cottage that is "bigger on the inside", as she puts it. Willow and Robin share a moment (mind reading maybe?) and then Robin tells them that they are not aloud to use magic in the house. Willow tells her that they are only there to talk. Robin then tells Buffy that the only thing of importance is that they save the prince. Buffy and Willow (along with us readers) have no idea what Robin is talking about...and it is left at that. Buffy and Willow enter the cottage and are suddenly on a never ending stair case. There is some dialogue about Faith and "Twilight" before they decide to play a game to kill the time.

Back with Xander and Dawn. Once Xander realizes that he is not in fact tangled in Dawn’s unmentionables, he procedes to ask her some leading questions about Kenny (The thricewise we have been led to believe took Dawn’s verginity...thus enlarging her to giant size).

Click on the link for more :

http://slayaliveblog.blogspot.com/2008/01/comic-review-dark-horses-season-8-10.html

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Julie Benz on "Rambo 4": Nydailynews.com Interview

From Nydailynews.com -�
Julie Benz on "Rambo 4": Nydailynews.com Interview

January 25, 2008 - Vietnam veteran John Rambo has survived many harrowing ordeals in his lifetime and has since withdrawn into a simple and secluded existence in Bangkok, where he spends his time salvaging old PT boats and tanks for scrap metal. Even though he is looking to avoid trouble, trouble has a way of finding him. A group of Christian human rights missionaries, led by Michael Burnett and Sarah Miller, approach Rambo with the desire to rent his boat to travel up the river to Burma. For over fifty years, Burma has been like a war zone. The Karen people of the region, who consist of peasants and farmers, have endured brutally oppressive rule from the murderous Burmese military and have been struggling for survival every single day. This is the time when medical assistance and general support from the Christian missionaries is needed most. After some consideration, and due to insistence from his mentor, former military man Ed Baumgartner, Rambo accepts the offer and takes Michael, Sarah, and the rest of the missionaries up the river. When the missionaries finally arrive at the Karen village, they are ambushed by the sadistic Major Pa Tee Tint and a slew of Burmese army men. A portion of the villagers and missionaries are tortured and viciously murdered, while Tint and his men hold the remainder captive. News soon reaches the minister in charge of the mission and with the help of Ed Baumgartner he employs Rambo to lead a rescue effort. With five young and highly diverse mercenaries at his disposal, Rambo has to travel back up the river and liberate the survivors from the clutches of Major Tint in what may be one of his deadliest missions ever.


Actress Julie Benz survived camp Stallone while making the new �Rambo�

Talk to Julie Benz about the glamorous life of a Hollywood actress and she�ll tell you about being tied to a pole next to a pigpen for a scene in "Rambo" - the day the pigs broke through the fence and started coming for her.

"I was terrified, because someone had told me that if they think you smell good, they�ll eat you!" Benz says. "I kept thinking, �I hope I smell bad!� It�s scary to come in contact with a 400-pound beast when you�re tied up. Even as someone came to rescue me, I heard Sly say, �Keep the cameras rolling!�"

Benz, speaking by telephone from Los Angeles, laughs - partly at the memory, partly at the fact that she�s actually referred to Sylvester Stallone as "Sly." After being cast as the female lead in the first "Rambo" film in 20 years, which opens Friday, it took her a while to stop calling the action icon "Mr. Stallone" during their time filming "Rambo," which writer and director Stallone hopes will rescue one of his signature characters the same way last year�s "Rocky Balboa" capped the saga of his Philly boxer.

"He hates it when I call him �Mr. Stallone,�" Benz, 35, says of the 61-year-old star, whom she admits was a favorite of hers when she was growing up. "But anytime you meet somebody whose work you�ve admired for a long time - when I went to audition, it was all I could do not to show that my hands were shaking. I had to get past my shyness to play opposite him. I went through a couple of phases - calling him �Mr. Stallone,� then calling him �Hey, you.�

"It took a while before I could call him �Sly� without giggling."

In "Rambo," Stallone�s Vietnam-vet soldier for hire, John Rambo (first seen in 1982�s relatively sedate thriller "First Blood," then elevated to iconic status in "Rambo: First Blood Part II" (1985) and last seen battling the Russians in Afghanistan in 1988�s "Rambo III"), is living peacefully in a backwater of Thailand (where the film was shot), piloting a boat and catching snakes for a riverside tourist attraction.

Benz�s Sarah asks him to ferry her and a group of doctors up the river to Burma, so they can help oppressed tribes. When the vicious Burmese military takes the doctors captive, it�s up to Rambo to rescue them.

Bullets, blood and body parts all fly, of course - but in her part, Benz never touched a weapon.

"I�m not a gun person," she admits. "But those were big guns. On some days, it was so loud and intense - the sound just rips through your gut. You�re not really acting; you�re reacting."

A slight, slim, 5-foot-4 native of Pittsburgh, Benz was nationally ranked at No. 13 in figure skating when she retired at age 16. A stress fracture derailed her as a young teen and, by the time she resumed skating, she�d discovered acting. So she put her athletic career on ice.

"Plus, figure skaters have a shorter shelf life," she notes.

After graduating from New York University, she moved to Los Angeles, where she started landing TV roles. She was eventually cast on "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" as Buffy�s nemesis, the evil vampire Darla, a role that carried over to "Buffy" spinoff "Angel."

Benz, so slinky and in control as the undead, is practically unrecognizable in her latest series, Showtime�s "Dexter." She plays Rita, a single mother who has survived an abusive marriage, and now is in a romantic relationship with a clean-cut police forensic scientist (Michael C. Hall) - who secretly is a serial killer who targets murderers and other nasty people.

"At the core, they�re kind of the same. They�re both very damaged women," Benz says. "They both tap into very different sides of me."

Neither, however, puts Benz into quite the state she was in at the end of a day playing a pigpen prisoner in "Rambo."

"I�d go back to the hotel and have to take three showers, just to get the first layer of mud off - and then take three more showers and a bath to finish the job," she says. "I don�t think I was clean the whole time I was filming."

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"Angel, After The Fall": issue 6 description

From Idwpublishing.com -
"Angel, After The Fall": issue 6 description


Angel: After the Fall #6

Joss Whedon & Brian Lynch (plot); Brian Lynch (w); John Byrne, Sean Galloway, David Messina, Stephen Mooney, Kevyn Schmidt (a); Joe & Rob Sharp, Rebecca A. Wrigley (c)

First Night begins! What happened on the very night Los Angeles went straight to hell, the incident that ended the Angel television series with such a shocking cliffhanger? Why did the team go their separate ways? And how did Connor rise up to become one of Hell’s greatest champions? This first issue of a two-part series-within-a-series has the answers you’ve been waiting for! By Joss Whedon, Brian Lynch and a host of comic’s greatest artists, including John Byrne, Sean Galloway, David Messina, and more!

*2 Covers will be shipped in a 1-to-1 ratio.

*Retailers: See your order form for special incentives

FC • $3.99 • 32 pages

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Jennifer Ouellette talk on "The Physics of the Buffyverse"

From Categoricallynot.com -
Jennifer Ouellette talk on "The Physics of the Buffyverse"


Ouellette, who authored the book, will give a talk on 27 January at Santa Monica Art Studios (6 for 6.30pm)

From the site:

For the physics behind Buffy the Vampire slayer (and kin), science writer Jennifer Ouellette will use the characters, concepts and plot lines of popular TV series to illustrate such fundamental physics as sound, electricity, thermodynamics, relativity, wormholes and string theory. An English major, Jennifer stumbled into science writing by accident, but has been avidly exploring her inner geek ever since. She writes for Discover, New Scientist, Symmetry, Salon, and Nature; and is the author of The Physics of the Buffyverse and Black Bodies and Quantum Cats: Tales from the Annals of Physics.



Click on the link for more info :

http://categoricallynot.com/upcomingevents.html

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Summer Glau talks Terminator with Buddytv.com

From Buddytv.com -
Summer Glau talks Terminator with Buddytv.com

Hey, this is Oscar Dahl from BuddyTV, and joining me in this interview is Daniel from TheTVAddict. We’re with Summer Glau from Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Summer, how are you doing?

I’m doing great. How are you all doing?

Oscar: Wonderful.

Daniel: Very good. It was a great, great pilot last night. It was really cool to see on the big screen.

Thank you.

Daniel: Was that the first time you’ve seen it?

It is the first time I’ve seen it completed. It was really interesting for me. The thing that I liked seeing was, you know, when you shoot a show it’s all out of sequence, so when they put it together I liked how my character seemed to switch on and off from doing the school scenes in the beginning, then how she changes once her alias is blown, she just changes. I thought that was cool.

Daniel: What attracted you to the role in the first place? Were you concerned at all that you’re very enmeshed in the sci-fi world with Firefly and The 4400, did that concern you a little moving on to another sci-fi show?

I didn’t think I’d get this part, so I didn’t worry about it that much. I went to the audition thinking I’ll just go in and I’ll do it. I never thought that they would consider me for this role, and then when they did I thought oh my goodness, I feel like I won the lottery, of course I’m going to do it. I love playing this part. I’ve never really thought much about sci-fi or not sci-fi. I always consider the role. If it’s a role I want to play, I play it. I’ve turned down roles that weren’t sci-fi because they weren’t interesting characters and they weren’t something that I wanted to do, so this was definitely something that I wanted to do.

Oscar: What are the difficulties of playing a robot for an actor? It seems like it’d be kind of a weird thing to wrap your mind around.

I’m still working on it every day when I come in in the mornings. There are days when I read a scene, and you know as an actress you usually have a gut instinct about it? When you’re playing a robot your gut instincts don’t come into play so much, you have to think about it. You have to shape the character. She’s very mysterious, so we’re having to kind of, we’re having to build her and build an arc for her. When I read the pilot, I said to Josh [Friedman, executive producer] "I don’t really know how to do this." I’ve played very vulnerable characters so far, very emotional characters, and this is something really different for me. So I really trust a lot in what the writers are doing.

Oscar: The reaction to both the series and your character [at Comic-Con] were just huge. What’s it like having such a big, loyal fanbase that kid of goes crazy?

It’s been amazing. We were very nervous when we brought our pilot to Comic-Con, because we knew there would be a lot of hardcore Terminator fans and we didn’t want to let them down. So we were nervous, and I couldn’t believe how positive everyone was. I mean, of course I believe in our show completely and I really want people to love it, but a lot of times people tend to be negative given the choice. It’s hard for people to be really supportive sometimes, and they were, and that meant a lot to me. I remember when I first started working for Joss [Whedon, creator of Firefly], he tried to explain to me what his fans were like. I just couldn’t picture it until I went to my first convention and I realized this is what it’s like to be one of Joss’s girls, you know? One of his actresses.

Daniel: Are you at all nervous for the reviews that are going to come out? You were cast in this over a year ago, you’ve worked so hard for like six months on the show, and finally it’s going to premiere on Sunday. Do you read the reviews? Do you pay attention to stuff like that, or do you just try to do the best you can?

I always try not to read it, because I always take it personally. I’m not able to separate, if I read ten great reviews and then I read one that says I’m ugly, then that’s all I remember. I try not to read anything, and I’m very nervous because I love this job, I love this series, I had no idea when I signed up for it how creative our writers are. They are so talented, we could keep writing new episodes for years, so these numbers really matter to me. At the party last night I wanted to enjoy it and I wanted to celebrate, but there’s a part of me that won’t be able to relax until Tuesday morning after we see our numbers. It does make a difference whether or not we’re going to be able to make another season.

Daniel: I know the writers’ strike has wrecked, well, I’m a TV addict so it’s wrecked my life, but it’s wrecked everything. You’re now not going to premiere against new stuff. Is it weird that it might benefit you a little, and the show?

It is weird. I feel bad saying that, because obviously we all want to go back to work. But we have been given a great opportunity, Fox has really, really promoted us, we’ve had a chance to talk to a lot of people about our show, and we feel like we’ve been set up really well. I already have people coming up to me on the street and saying they’re so excited about the show, and it hasn’t even aired yet.

Daniel: The giant posters of you I’m sure help. Is that surreal at all? You get into acting and I’m sure you never imagine that, with Firefly and now, in L.A. you’re on giant buildings. It’s crazy.

Yeah, I couldn’t believe that, when I came home from Texas for the holidays and that picture was everywhere, on every bus. I don’t know how I got so lucky. Joss Whedon and Josh Friedman have really just put me in a position that I never ever pictured possible. I’m very lucky.

Daniel: I really love the show, and there’s such a great chemistry between yourself and John. Are we going to see a relationship? Because you’re a robot and he’s human, I don’t know how that works really.

Well, nobody knows how it works yet. There have been some clues that it’s going to be a lot more complicated than I’m a robot and he’s a human.

Oscar: In the pilot they kind of hinted that you were a different, newer model.

That keeps popping up in the next episodes. There’s all sorts of complications about what she actually can feel. She can feel. I hope we really take it someplace new. I think we already have.

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Saturday, January 19, 2008

Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 1/19/2008

1/19/2003:
Looking to close Veterans Stadium with a bang, the Philadelphia Eagles go out with a whimper, losing the NFC title game to Tampa Bay, 27-10. After the Eagles score on their opening drive, it's all Tampa Bay. A 71-yard pass play from Brad Johnson to Joe Jurevicius sets up the Buccaneers' first TD, Keyshawn Johnson catches a nine-yard TD pass a little bit later and cornerback Ronde Barber scores on a 92-yard interception return to clinch matters with three minutes left. They'll go on to rout the Oakland Raiders as well, 48-21, in the Super Bowl to win their first world title in head coach Jon Gruden's first year with the team.

Birthdays:
Bill Mlkvy b. 1931
O.J. Anderson b. 1957
Stefan Edberg b. 1966
Junior Seau b. 1969
Tyrone Wheatley b. 1972

1996:
The No. q-ranked Tennessee Volunteers women's basketball team knocked off second-ranked Vanderbilt, 85-82.

"Among the dozen women's basketball teams in the Southeastern Conference, eight still have Lady in their nicknames. But the spectacle that unfolds when any two of them meet will not be mistaken for a Helena Bonham-Carter movie." -Alexander Wolff, February 26, 1996


FEELS GOOD

The seventh book (and what some say is the best yet) in the delightful No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series, Blue Shoes and Happiness finds our heroine, Precious Ramotswe, continuing to tackle life, love, friendship, and mystery in Botswana. Smith, in his infinitely gentle way, is not afraid to tackle real evil and human perfidy in his work, yet we are always charmed and the enduring values of life prevail.

BLUE SHOES AND HAPPINESS, by Alexander McCall Smith (Pantheon, 2006)

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 1/18/2008

1/18/2004:
Ernie Els of South Africa celebrates with his daughter after winning the Sony-Hawaiian Open for the second straight year in a sudden-death playoff. Today, on the third extra hole, he drains a 30-footer to beat Harrison Frazer of Texas; last year, he converted a 40-foot putt to defeat Aaron Baddeley of Australia. Els becomes the first back-to-back winner of the Hawaiian Open since Corey Pavin in 1986 and '87 and the first golfer to win the same tourney back-to-back in playoffs since Nick Faldo at the Masters in 1989 and '90.

Birthdays:
Syl Apps b. 1915
Curt Flood b. 1938
Mark Messier b. 1961
Brady Anderson b. 1964
Mike Lieberthal b. 1972

1974:
Notre Dame's Dwight Clay sank a crucial jump shot and gave the Fighting Irish a 71-70 upset victory over the UCLA Bruins. The loss snapped the Bruins' 88-game winning streak, the longest in college basketball history.

"Dwight Clay stared opportunity in the face and never shivered. His jump shot with 29 seconds remaining wiped clean UCLA's 88-game winning streak and once again cast Notre Dame as the bad seed in the Bruins' victory garden." -Barry McDermott, January 28, 1974

Packers Fact:
Brett Favre's 14 3,000-yard passing seasons in his career (entering 2006) are the most in NFL history.

The beloved author of Prince of Tides and Lords of Discipline reexamines the themes of masculinity, failure, fear, and writing, from a vantage point 30 years after his excoriating experience as a point guard during his college years at the Citadel, in Charleston, North Carolina. Conroy can write well about anything, and this happens to be a darn good book about sports, for one thing, and, of course, a thoughtful, even haunting, foray into memory and the scars of youth.

MY LOSING SEASON, by Pat Conroy (Nan A. Talese, 2002)

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Thursday, January 17, 2008

Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 01/17/2008

Not exactly endearing himself to ticket-buying fans of more modest means than handsomely compensated NBA players, Latrell Sprewell offered a haughty response when asked why he turned down a three-year, $21 million contract extension offer from the Minnesota Timberwolves: "I have to feed my family."

Birthdays:
Jacques Plante b. 1929
Kip Keino b. 1940
Muhammed Ali b. 1942
Chili Davis b. 1960
Jeremy Roenick b. 1970

1971:
Super Bowl V, which was the most exciting Super Bowl game to date, featured a record 11 turnovers.

"Perhaps the game should be called the Blunder Bowl. The Baltimore Colts won by default, not design. They defeated the Dallas Cowboys 16-13 on a field goal by Jim O'Brien with five seconds remaining, one of the few plays of the day that worked as it was supposed to. -Tex Maule, January 25, 1971



ABOUT SHERLOCK

Short-listed for the 2005 Man Booker Prize, Arthur & George is a beautifully structured story that interweaves the lives of Arthur (Conan Doyle) and George (Edalji). The Victorian setting teems with issues of class, morality, friendship, and love. Chapter by chapter, Arthur and George merge and emerge. What you need to know comes along in its own good time, while you become completely hooked into this story of the world’s most renowned writer of detective fiction and an unknown Staffordshire solicitor accused of heinous crimes. Why and how Sir Arthur Conan Doyle proves George Edalji’s innocence is Julian Barnes’s brilliant achievement, a marvelous fiction based on a true and historically significant story.

ARTHUR & GEORGE, by Julian Barnes (Knopf, 2006)

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

apckrfan's NFL picks: Week 20: Conference Playoff Weekend

Week 20: Conference Playoff Weekend
Chargers @ Patriots - NE
Giants @ Packers - GB

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Sports Fact and Book Rec of the Day 1/16/2008

1/16/2001:
Dave Winfield and Kirby Puckett are elected to the baseball Hall of Fame in their first year of eligibility. Winfield is one of only seven players with over 3,000 hits and 400 home runs (3,110 and 465). Puckett, the dynamic star of the Minnesota Twins, collected more hits (2,040) in his first 10 calendar years (1984-93) than anyone in history. They'll be joined by two Veterans Committee selections, Pittsburgh second baseman Bill Mazeroski and pitcher Hilton Smith of the Negro Leagues, at induction ceremonies this summer at Cooperstown.

Birthdays:
Dizzy Dean b. 1911
A.J. Foyt b. 1935
Jack McDowell b. 1966
Roy Jones Jr. b. 1969
Albert Pujols b. 1980

1962:
Bob Pettit set a National Basketball Association All-Star Game record with 27 rebounds and was named the game's Most Valuable Player for an unprecedented fourth time.

"Pettit's daily Jekyll-Hyde transformation is a startling phenomenon. Off court, he is shy and mild to the point of meekness; when the whistle blows, he is a relentless bundle of aggression, irresistibly on the scent of victory. -Jeremiah Tax, January 5, 1959

Packers Fact:
Brett Favre entered the 2006 season with 19 career games in which he had passed for 4 or more touchdowns. Only Dan Marino, with 21, had more 4 TD days.


CELEBRITY BIO

“Funny, I don’t feel like a celebrity.”—Barbra Streisand

If you like Babs, or even have a tepid interest in the subject, avoid Christopher Andersen’s 2006 Barbra: The Way She Is, reviled by critics and readers alike, and opt instead for this definitive 600-page, 1.6-pound masterpiece of gossip and adoration by a veteran celeb biographer (chronicler of Princess Diana, Vivian Leigh, Maria Callas, Katharine Hepburn, and many others). This comes close to capturing the diva the way she is—full of contradictions, ego, and talent.

STREISAND: A BIOGRAPHY, by Anne Edwards (Berkley, 1998)

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