Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Hot Trends: Jonas Brothers officially break up after 'unanimous' decision: 'It's over for now'



Cooper Neill/Getty Images

The Jonas Brothers have officially pulled the plug on their family band.

Weeks after canceling their 19-city tour in early October, the trio confirmed to People magazine that they have "unanimously" agreed to call it quits.

"It's over for now," Kevin Jonas, 25, told the magazine.



Initial reports suggested the brothers were fighting, and that Joe Jonas, 24, had an issue with substance abuse - but both claims appear to be false. Instead, the brothers are on good terms, and are working on solo projects. RELATED: JONAS BROTHERS RIFT IS 'BEGINNING OF THE END' FOR THE GROUP: REPORT

"Nick and the Administration are working on another album," a source previously told People.



The gang of New Jersey-born brothers formed their band in 2005, and rose to fame as a Disney Channel-affiliated group.

Going on to worldwide success, and even a Grammy nomination, they became known as individual celebrities. Nick Jonas released a solo album, while Kevin Jonas and his wife, Danielle, became reality stars with their E! show, "Married to Jonas."

Evidence of the band's demise came in early October, after they deleted the group's Twitter page, though their individual accounts remain active.

RELATED: JONAS BROTHERS CANCEL TOUR DUE TO 'DEEP RIFT WITHIN THE BAND'

"Please hold while we get our s--t together," Joe Jonas tweeted on Oct. 22, when news of a potential split broke.

The decision to break up apparently came after Nick Jonas, 21, expressed his concerns during a meeting, People reports.

"I was feeling kind of trapped," he said. "I needed to share my heart with my brothers."

"It's really hard to say 'forever,'" the youngest of the trio added.

"We're closing a chapter, for sure."

cmonde@nydailynews.com

'X-Men: Days of Future Past' trailer: A Deep Dive


The Great Superhero War of 2014 officially began this week. Mere days after the Marvel Studios assembly line released the trailer for next year's intriguing Captain America sequel-slash-SHIELD spinoff, 20th Century Fox just debuted the first complete teaser for X-Men: Days of Future Past, the franchise-binding sequel-prequel. Running just a little over two minutes, the Future Past trailer features the return of pretty much every X-actor whose name doesn't rhyme with Mames Jarsden, while also spotlighting some new faces. The result looks like it could either be the Ocean's Eleven of superhero movies or the Love Actually of superhero movies, both of which sound much better than whatever X-Men: The Last Stand was.


Since Future Past combines various strands of the 13-year-old movie franchise, and weaves in ambient bits of X-Men lore from the past half-century, the film's trailer may induce a feeling of cultural vertigo. Let's dive in and try to sort things out, shall we?


We begin with a close-up on an eyeball, while a familiar face asks a question: "What's the last thing you remember?"


We pull back and see that the eyes belong to Wolverine, aka Logan, aka Weapon X, aka Hugh Jackman. This marks Jackman's seventh go-round as Wolverine, including a hilarious f-bomb cameo in First Class and the Wolverine spinoff series, which produced one terrible film ( X-Men: Origins-Wolverine) and one surprisingly decent film ( The Wolverine). You might note that Wolvie is looking a bit gray around the temples in this shot. This seems like a direct replication of Future Wolverine's hair from the original Days of Future Past comic book arc.


Original X-Men roll call! Halle Berry is back as Storm, who is looking very anxious in this image. She's flashing Logan a stare that seems to say: "Go. Save yourself. I'll sacrifice myself in a dystopian prologue, with the understanding that the plot of the movie that follows will potentially resurrect me for the sequel."


Patrick Stewart is back as Charles Xavier. This makes two close-ups on an eyeball in the first twenty seconds. One more and Future Past is officially a Lost spinoff, too.


"I had a glimpse into the past," says Professor X, and we get a glimpse into the franchise's past. Say hello to Iceman, played by Shawn Ashmore's dystopia beard...


...Kitty Pryde, played by Ellen Page...


...and Rogue, played by Anna Paquin. They all look very stern. Things have not gone well for our OG X-People, no they have not.


Also back for more fun: Ian McKellan's Magneto. You may recall that The Last Stand left off with Professor X dead and Magneto powerless, but you may also remember that the epilogues for The Last Stand hinted that Magneto would get his powers back and Professor X wasn't actually dead. Basically, Days of Future Past is the story of Bryan Singer time-traveling back to 2005, turning down Superman Returns, and making the actual sequel to X2.


Magneto appears to be running with a tight crew of badasses, the most notable being Bishop. Bishop first appeared in the X-books in the early '90s. In his original incarnation, he was a mutant policeman who traveled back from the future to save the X-Men from calamity. That whole "travel back to save the X-Men" story arc appears to have been swooped by Wolverine in the movie. Considering that Bishop has the B-list power of absorbing and redirecting energy, that's probably a good thing. Still, Omar Sy looks pretty cool.


And that's Sunspot, a less memorable character from the New Mutants/X-Force era who has the power to absorb and redirect power. But he can do it with solar power. Which is good for the environment. Anyhow, he can shoot fire and stuff.


Magneto and Professor X join forces: "Side by side to end this war." We don't know the exact particulars of this "war" they're talking about, although given that there appears to be no sun or smiling in the future, we can assume things are not so good.


The cast assembles in what appears to be the ruins of a cathedral. It's worth pointing out that despite this trailer's feast-for-fanboys vibe, there is a lot of ambiguity around Future Past's future setting. Sure, Wolverine has gray temples. But all the other X-Men look as old as they should look seven years after The Last Stand. So is Future Past actually set in the "present day" of the X-Men-verse? Or maybe - a la the Harry Potter series - the original X-trilogy actually took place much earlier than we thought, like 1994? Also, how does this connect to that surprise teaser at the end of The Wolverine, which did not appear to be set in a dystopian future without sunlight?


The plan comes into focus. Says Wolverine: "I wake up in my younger body, and then what?" "Find me," says Professor X. And sure enough, we do. First Class Roll Call! James McAvoy is rocking a Mad Men Season 6 beard as the younger Professor X...


...while Michael Fassbender is back as young Erik Lehnsherr, the man who will be Magneto. He's on a "darker path" than Professor X, we're told. When we left him in First Class, Erik appeared to be on his way to starting a Mutant revolution. Here, though, he's pointing a gun at somebody: Suggestive of the Cold War mercenary work he was doing when we found him at the start of First Class.


"You're going to need to do for me what I once did for you," Old-Professor tells Wolverine. "Lead me. Guide me." This may hurt your head a bit: In the original X-Men, Wolverine was a loner who had lost everything and believed in nothing. Professor X made him into an X-Men. Now, Wolverine is repaying the favor...by traveling to a time when the Professor was a loner who had lost everything and believed in nothing. In the fullness of time, 2024′s X-Men: Nights of Past Future will see Professor X travel back in time from the '80s to the '40s, when Wolverine was a loner who had etc etc.


So now we get the general gist of the plan: Wolverine is going to travel back in time into the mind of his past self. This is the Slaughterhouse-Five unstuck-in-time method (also demonstrated by Desmond on Lost), not to be confused with the physical-time-travel method preferred by Doctor Who and Marty McFly. The latter is dangerous since you run the risk of meeting your past self. That's never a good idea, since your past and future self might explode, according to the Blinovitch Limitation Effect, also known as the Timecop Rule.


In the future, someone - let's say Colossus, because we know he's around here somewhere - is attacked. By...something.


Young Mystique, shown here in her guise as mild-mannered Raven Darkholme. She looks to my like she's spying on someone. Or maybe it's just those mysterious bangs.


These total randos are not X-Men, although the subject of their gunfire is interesting...


...yes, here's Wolverine, apparently in his past incarnation. This is when we have to address the continuity elephant in the room. Future Past is set in the early '70s. According to X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Wolverine was fighting in Vietnam in the early '70s, before embarking on their adventures with Team X, the team of mutants which featured Ryan Reynold's Deadpool and lots of other mutants you forgot. Is Future Past going to address why '70s-Wolverine isn't rolling with his brother Victor? Or is Future Past going to heroically erase X-Men Origins: Wolverine from the timeline?


...Peter Dinklage, playing baddie Bolivar Trask, shown here rocking a mustache big enough to strangle an elephant...


...and President Richard Milhous Nixon, who has the incredible mutant ability to erase audio recordings of himself.


This may be controversial, but I think Storm achieved her hair epitome in The Last Stand, with a shorter cut that looked ready for action, but still allowed for some snazzy windblown badassery. When your power is control of the freaking elements, your hair must have some windblown potential.




For the sake of comparison, here's a trading card from Storm's mohawk period. When it comes to Storm's hair in an X-Men trilogy, you must always ask: "Would Halle Berry look better in a mohawk?"


Just for comparison, here's our Ian McKellan makes a "Magnetism Go!" face...


...and here's how Fassbender makes a "Magnetism Go!" face. Which do you prefer? This is the kind of question we need to ask ourselves, people.


A quick word about Blink. The character was introduced exactly one month before she died in the mid-90s, essentially a throwaway character with a hand-me-down superpower . She achieved unexpected prominence one year later, when all the X-Men books - and this was the mid-'90s, so there were about 57 X-Men books - spent four months in a parallel universe where mutants took over the world. In that alternate universe, Blink was still alive...and the alterna-Blink proved to be incredibly popular, not least because of her cosplay-ready character design. (Vintage Joe Madureira: Cool hair, cool makeup, lotsa pinkk.) So the character was re-reintroduced in another alternate universe, before ultimately being resurrected in the main universe. And that's not to mention "What If?" #75, an issue of Marvel's alternate-universe monthly, wherein Blink survives, achieves cosmic powers, attempts to change her own past and almost destroys all of reality. I'm betting she'll have three lines of dialogue and a minute of screentime in Days of Future Past. Still: Not bad.


Now, I know what you guys are wondering, assuming you stuck through that Blink tangent: "But I thought this movie had Sentinels? Where are the Sentinels?" Answer: Probably still being worked on by talented digital effects engineers. In lieu of any actual Sentinel appearances, here's a picture of the Sentinel action figure who stands guard outside of my office, shown in a state of existential disarray:


Actually, he looks lonely. Let's give him some friends.


Look at that! Mr. Sentinel has been joined by his pals: Spider-Man with a Superman Headband, Bane, Donald Duck in a Stormtrooper Outfit, and the Ferrari from The Counselor . You laugh, but this is exactly how they wrote Days of Future Past.


We end with an old man talking to his younger self. "Please," he says. "We need you to hope again." It's Professor X talking to his younger self. Perhaps it's also the X-Men franchise talking to its own past self. 2000′s X-Men was the official beginning of the post-millenial Superhero Era on film. The franchise has produced one beloved classic ( X2), one pretty-good spinoff ( First Class), one film you'll learn to love when it plays on FX nonstop in 2014 ( The Wolverine), and a couple bad movies that hopefully after Future Past will have never existed.


But the franchise has also seen imitators and newcomers take its place. Marvel Studios turned the multi-franchise strategy into an industry-redefining model. (Marvel has made two billion-dollar movies; the X franchise topped out with The Last Stand, which made a mere $460 million.) That's not to mention the DC Batman/Superman/Nolan series, or the incipient Amazing Spider-Man reboot saga. Can X-Men achieve new glories in the future by returning to its glorious past? Can hope triumph in the face of bleak destiny? Does this mean the next movie will be set in the 1980s, which means Miley Cyrus can finally essay the role of Dazzler? Time will tell. Or has already told. Or will have already been about to be told, eventually.



Hot Trends: Hip-Hop Rumors: Peter Gunz is a Ladies Man Who Knows How to Work His ...







Last night's episode of Love & Hip-Hop New York depicted Peter Gunz in a Stevie J-esque situation. He's basically in love with the mother of two of his children and his artist.

Trouble abounds.

Many of us were scratching our heads about what the heck these women see in him, especially considering that he lives with his baby's mother in her "bachelorette" pad. Well...

Remember when he rapped, "You can guarantee that Peter knows how to eat her" in his popular 1997 single with Lord Tariq entitled, "Deja Vu (Uptown Baby)?" Word on the street is, the rumors are true. He's also a charmer.

"Peter Gunz is a smooth talker and a good conversationalist. He knows how to make you feel like you're the only one," says a source who alleges to have slept with him. "He's a sucka for a pretty face so it's best not to be naive about the situation and try not to get hooked! He wasn't lying when he said he said he had skills when it comes to going down."

Said source wouldn't say when this romp took place because she "doesn't want to get him in more trouble with the baby mama."

Wow. Ok.

Looks like Mona Scott-Young got the right line up for season.

Hot Trends: Goal-Line Stand Saves Seahawks in Win Over Rams





Russell Wilson threw two touchdown passes to Golden Tate, and the Seattle Seahawks made a dramatic goal-line stand in the final minute to beat the Rams, 14-9, on Monday night in St. Louis.

The Seahawks (7-1), riding the best start in franchise history, were forced to punt with a little more than 5 minutes left in the game, but they managed to pin St. Louis at its own 3-yard line.

Backup quarterback Kellen Clemens marched the Rams (3-5) to the Seattle 1, but Daryl Richardson was stuffed on the third down and Clemens threw an incomplete pass on the fourth down as time expired.

The Seahawks won despite gaining 135 yards of total offense, 80 of it on Wilson's second touchdown pass to Tate. Two plays later, Wilson went deep down the sideline to Tate, who made an acrobatic leaping catch over Janoris Jenkins. Tate regained his balance and ran to the end zone, earning an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. Wilson was sacked a career-high seven times.

Clemens made his first start in two years in place of the injured quarterback Sam Bradford.

PANTHER SAYS HE'S A TARGET Carolina Panthers free safety Mike Mitchell said he was being "targeted" by N.F.L. Commissioner Roger Goodell after receiving his fifth fine of the season. Mitchell was fined $7,875 last week by the league for taunting after he shoved St. Louis Rams quarterback Sam Bradford out of bounds during a game on Oct. 20. Mitchell was not penalized for taunting in the game.

"I'm being targeted because I play football physical, but I'm not out here cheap-shotting guys and doing dirty plays like I've seen people from Detroit do," Mitchell said.

Brian McCarthy, the spokesman for the league, said Goodell did not make the decisions regarding on-field infractions.

REDSKINS SAFETY STRIKES BACK Washington Redskins safety Brandon Meriweather said that "people who beat their girlfriends should be kicked out of the league" - a swipe at Chicago Bears receiver Brandon Marshall.

Meriweather made the comment after a one-game suspension for helmet-first hits. One of the hits was made against Marshall. Marshall said players like Meriweather perhaps need to be "taken out of the game completely."

Meriweather said, "You tell me who you'd rather have - somebody who plays aggressive on the field, or somebody who beat up their girlfriend?"

Marshall has a history of multiple arrests after confrontations with a girlfriend when he was playing for the Denver Broncos.

AROUND THE LEAGUE Tampa Bay Buccaneers receiver Mike Williams is out for the season with a hamstring injury. ... Cleveland Browns punt returner Travis Benjamin tore his anterior cruciate ligament against Kansas City, and he will miss the rest of the season.

Hot Trends: Orca trainer saw best of Keiko, worst of Tilikum



Victoria, British Columbia (CNN) -- Colin Baird still remembers the day he got the call from work more than 23 years ago, when he learned of his co-worker's fate.

"We need you to come in," said his colleague from the Sealand of the Pacific in Victoria.

His fellow trainer, 20-year old Keltie Byrne, had slipped and fallen into the orca tank. Byrne was an exceptionally strong swimmer but she was no match for the aquarium's killer whales.

"She tried to get back out and the other girl tried to pull her up, but the whale grabbed her back foot and pulled her under," eyewitness Nadine Kallen told CNN affiliate CTV in 1991. "And then the whales -- they bounced her around the pool a whole bunch of times, and she was screaming for help.

"They tried to grab her with sticks, but they couldn't get her," Kallen said. "And she finally didn't come up any more."

Jack Hanna: I still visit SeaWorld

Cowperthwaite on her film 'Blackfish'

Hanna & Cowperthwaite discuss captivity

Should SeaWorld free the killer whales?

There were three orcas at Sealand at the time -- two females, Haida and Nootka, and Tilikum, the sole male. Tilikum would later become infamous for the 2010 killing of SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau.

Tilikum -- or "Tili," as he was known -- was popular and "very easy to work with," Baird recalled.

"He was very easygoing, he learned quickly, he learned well, very responsive," he said. "You know, he was probably my favorite of the three."

That wasn't the case every day.

"They have personalities, for the lack of a better word, individual personalities, and they have good days and bad days just as we do," Baird said. "There were some days, Tilikum would have a certain look in his eye -- then I would just say, 'Nope, not getting in the water with him today.' " 'Blackfish' film sparks debate over kids and animal parks

Beleaguered by the two larger, more dominant females, Tilikum would often be driven away into isolation, his sleek black skin often deeply scored and scraped by Haida and Nootka's sharp teeth.

When Keltie Byrne slipped into the orca tank on February 20, 1991, Sealand needed divers to go into the enclosure with the whales to try to reach her. Baird was one of those divers.

"They had a hard time getting to her," Baird said. "When I arrived, the police suggested that it was a body recovery and not a life-saving effort. And truly that's what it became."

The tragedy rocked Canada.

"People in general couldn't believe what had happened right here in our own backyard," said marine zoologist Anna Hall.

The coroner's inquest into Keltie Byrne's death said she had drowned "due to or as a consequence of forced submersion by orca (killer) whales."

It was the first known time a killer whale had ever killed a human being.

"It was a tough time for all of us," Baird said, referring to the Sealand trainers after Byrne's death. "The next day going back into the pool, and swimming around, and collecting up her clothes and her boots and her whistle and things, and then having to go up and feed the whales and give them their vitamins in the morning, and all of that, I mean it was so surreal."

The truth behind orcas in captivity

Troubled orca's early history

"Blackfish" documentary

Can killer whales be in captivity safely?

Baird said he believed wholeheartedly that that it was an accident.

"As best as I can understand it, the three orcas were a little surprised that one of their trainers had seemingly jumped into the pool, although fallen, and they were sort of excited about that, it was something completely out of the norm," he said.

"This wasn't a malicious attack; it was an accident. She had fallen, she had slipped and fell, and taken in a lung full of water. It was not a malicious attack."

Baird believes the orcas recognized something was wrong.

"As soon as she became non-responsive and unconscious in the water, they kept her at the surface," Baird recalled. "You know, they couldn't conceptualize ... that the water was cold, or that she can't hold her breath for 20 minutes. I mean, these things probably don't occur to them. As best as they probably were able to rationalize the situation ... they saw she was in peril and needed help, and so they ... kept her at the surface. And that's behavior that they would exhibit with their own in the wild." Opinion: A win-win solution for orcas and marine parks

Amid a tidal wave of negative reaction from the public and its own employees, Sealand shuttered its doors the following year, and its three orcas were sold to SeaWorld in the United States.

Years later, Colin Baird would train another killer whale that, just like Tilikum, would gain international attention and profoundly impact the way people viewed killer whales in captivity. From Tilikum to 'Free Willy'

In 1991, the same year that Keltie Byrne died, Warner Brothers Studios was looking for the star of their next film, "Free Willy."

The casting couldn't have been any more perfect.

"We were location scouting and looking for a seaquarium that would fit the scenario for our film," producer Jennie Lew Tugend said. "It had to be a pretty rundown aquarium where there was essentially one orca whale swimming by himself. And so, many other aquariums did not work. But when we got to Mexico City, we found Keiko." Photos: Killer whales in captivity

Keiko, who had been captured off the coast of Iceland in 1979 when he was 3 years old, was in terrible shape. His home in Mexico was too small, too hot and unequipped to deal with a killer whale.

He was lethargic, riddled with skin lesions, had digestive problems, and was extremely underweight.

During the movie's five-week filming period, the crew took steps to improve Keiko's health.

Filmmaker: Captivity bad for whales

Do killer whales belong in captivity?

The truth behind orcas in captivity

An up close look at killer whales

After filming wrapped, producers felt so strongly about the orca they left languishing behind in Mexico, they added a toll-free phone number at the end of the movie with the tagline, "How far would you go for a friend?"

The movie released in 1993 and audiences fell in love with it. Children responded in torrents, sending their lunch money to help the real-life orca.

With the financial backing of Warner Brothers -- also owned by CNN's parent company Time Warner -- and broadcasting magnate Craig McCaw, a plan was developed to try to set the captive whale free. Opinion: Keiko's release could be a solution for Tilikum

Colin Baird first met Keiko in Iceland where the whale had finally returned after a staggeringly complicated ballet of logistics. Baird was the project team coordinator, there to teach this killer whale how to hone his killer instinct. After spending most of his life cared for by humans, Keiko needed to learn wild orca behaviors.

As Keiko's confidence grew, so did the stretches of time that he was separated from his trainers. After a particularly violent Icelandic storm, Baird lost sight of him. Outfitted with a transmitter, satellites tracked the killer whale heading in a straight line due north to Norway.

For Baird, that trek proved remarkable -- not just that Keiko made the journey, but that he appeared to have been feeding himself on his own in the wild.

"When I got into the water and measured him in Norway, he was just to the centimeter what he'd been before we had left the bay pen," he said. "That huge massive caloric output every day that he would have had to maintain to swim from Iceland to Norway, we would definitely have seen a marked reduction in his weight, and that simply wasn't the case."

In December 2003, Baird was on vacation when he noticed his voice mail was full of messages from a trainer he worked with on the Keiko project.

"It started out, 'Oh hey, Keiko's acting a bit funny.' Then I would hear the next message and she would be a bit more worried. Then it kept going and by the end she was crying into the phone and then so was I ... just, (tears) coming down right in the middle of the airport."

Keiko had died.

Colin took it hard. "He was perfectly fit and healthy when I left, and his behavior changed very quickly. And he died on a Friday and his behavior really started to change on a Wednesday so he went very quickly. And I was very surprised."

It's believed the 27-year-old orca died of pneumonia.

Keiko was the last killer whale Colin trained. Meanwhile, his other former charge continued to make headlines. Tilikum kills again

In July 1999, the lifeless body of a man named Daniel Dukes was found lying across Tilikum's back in a SeaWorld Orlando tank. Authorities said it was unclear how Dukes stayed in the park after closing, but that he had shown a "fascination" with the whales previously.

He drowned, and the death was ruled as accidental.

Eleven years later, in front of horrified onlookers, 12,000-pound Tilikum grabbed a hold of SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau and pulled her under. 'Blackfish' film explores trainer's death, captive orcas

The killing sparked the making of a documentary acquired by CNN Films called "Blackfish," which explores incidents in aquatic parks leading up to the veteran Brancheau's death.

In response to the film SeaWorld said in a statement to CNN: "Blackfish is billed as a documentary, but instead of a fair and balanced treatment of a complex subject, the film is inaccurate and misleading and, regrettably, exploits a tragedy that remains a source of deep pain for Dawn Brancheau's family, friends and colleagues."

"Perhaps most important, the film fails to mention SeaWorld's commitment to the safety of its team members and guests and to the care and welfare of its animals, as demonstrated by the company's continual refinement and improvement to its killer whale facilities, equipment and procedures both before and after the death of Dawn Brancheau."

When he heard the news in February 2010, Colin Baird said he immediately feared for the orca he once trained in Canada.

"I felt badly for Tilikum, and wondered what his coming days were going be like in terms of, was he going to be secluded off to some pool just used for stud?" Baird said. "You know, there is a certain enrichment that is necessary in captivity, I mean you've got to keep these animals minds busy, you've got to keep working with them, you've got to keep them -- I wouldn't say entertained -- but active, and I wondered what kind of quality of life was he going to have after that incident whether he be relegated to some side pool and forgotten about."

He hasn't seen Tilikum in more than 20 years, but said the incident is a reminder why he got out of the business of working with captive killer whales.

"I think everyone has a better understanding of the natural world, and the intelligence and social infrastructure of these amazing animals -- and that concrete pools are not a place for them to be."

Today, Tilikum is the oldest-living orca in SeaWorld's captivity. According to SeaWorld, he interacts with other whales and makes regular public appearances during shows.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...