Posts Tagged ‘news’

Portland’s Got Talent

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

High school groups, cheerleaders, girlfriends enjoying an out-of-the ordinary afternoon outing, a guy dressed as Ozzy Osbourne  – they were all in the crowd that came to Keller Auditorium  on a sunny Thursday afternoon to watch a taping of the NBC show, “America’s Got Talent.”

The TV talent competition was in town to tape performances by singers, magicians, dancers, bands and others who made it through local auditions held Feb. 28-March 1.  The “America’s Got Talent” cast – host Nick Cannon  and judges Piers Morgan,  Sharon Osbourne  and Howie Mandel  – are traveling around the country taping shows before live audiences through March and April. The tour started in Los Angeles March 12-13,  and then came to Portland. The show, a summer ratings hit for NBC, returns for its fifth season June 1.

While it’s produced by the company behind “American Idol,” “America’s Got Talent” is more democratic than its ratings-juggernaut sibling. Unlike “American Idol,” “America’s Got Talent” is open to all ages, and welcomes variety acts of any kind – ventriloquists, comedians, contortionists, and anything else you can think of, who compete for a $1 million prize.

Variety was definitely in the mix on the Keller stage Thursday afternoon, during the third of the show’s four Portland tapings. Before the show, crew members told the audience how to boisterously register their likes and dislikes – standing up, cheering, booing, making hand gestures to signal a contestant should be booted, and shouting “Vegas! Vegas! Vegas!” for ones they liked.

Then the judges came out, to thunderous applause. As they took their seats, facing the stage, Morgan displayed a souvenir someone gave him after the Wednesday taping – a “KEEP PORTLAND WEIRD” bumper-sticker.

Cannon asked the judges, “Is Portland weird to you?”

“It absolutely is,” said Osbourne. “But I love it!”

View full sizeRoss William Hamilton/The OregonianJill Fjeldman of Talent, Oregon, sang and danced while on three stilts.The afternoon’s would-be stars included Rachel Nedrow,  a 14-year-old  whose talent is stacking cups. The slim teen-ager stood at a table and stacked orange and green cups into pyramids, to the loud accompaniment of the song, “Maniac.”  The stage behind her was decorated in red-white-and-blue. Above the stage were three huge X’s, each with a judge’s name. Each judge has a button they can press when they don’t want an act to keep going; when they press it, the judge’s X lights up in red.

Morgan’s X lighted up as Nedrow dropped a cup. When she completed her act, Morgan asked: “Tell me the name of the most famous cup stacker in the world.” Nedrow knew who it was. Nevertheless, Morgan wasn’t convinced the larger audience was starving for cup-stacking acts.

Mandel, who takes over as judge this season for David Hasselhoff, was more supportive. “Piers, you don’t do this to children,” Mandel said.

Osbourne suggested Nedrow could increase the showmanship factor, maybe with “some bejeweling of the cups.”

Others trying their luck were hip-hop dancers from the Bay Area, a Bollywood-style dance troupe, and a septuagenarian harmonica player named Pierre.

Also on hand were performers from auditions held in Talent, the town in Southern Oregon. Morgan seemed amazed. “Is there really a town called Talent?” the British judge asked.

Talent’s Jeremy VanSchoonhoven  did a trick bicycle-riding act, lifting up the front wheels while hopping from platform to platform on the bike. The audience was as raucous as a Jerry Springer crowd, fist-pumping, screaming, “Vegas!” and acting very un-Portlandlike in their full-throated hollering.

Judges, from left, Piers Morgan, Sharon Osbourne and Howie Mandel were in town to give their takes on the competitors.Mandel noted that VanSchoonhoven fell at one point, with the bicycle seat perilously close to a vulnerable spot between his legs: “There was drama, there was thrill, and your friend almost ended up with nil.”

The talent from Talent kept coming: a woman who performed ballet while balancing on three stilts; and a young woman who hung from a trapeze while singing a song she wrote for a musical about the rain forest. At that, someone in the audience muttered, “Uh, oh.”

During a break, Layne Fish, 58,  observed, “It doesn’t seem like they have a whole lot of talent.” The pastor of Vancouver Vineyard Church  said her daughter auditioned, but didn’t make the cut.

Who from the Portland taping did the judges vote through to the next round? We can’t spoil the surprise. But the competition is far from over. “America’s Got Talent” next goes to Dallas, Texas; Orlando, Fla.; New York City; and Chicago.

Source: Oregon Live

Archie Meets the School Gyrls Sneak Peek!

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

“Gyrl Crazy!”: When an all-girl band breaks down in Riverdale, it’s music to Archie’s ears… and a sour note for Betty and Veronica! But it’s not long before everyone is jamming together. Will the “School Gyrls” collaboration with the Archies be a chart-topping hit or a resounding dud?

Archie Meets the School Gyrls is currently on sale at comic book shops and will be available on newsstands & online March 23rd, 2010

Source: Archie Comics

Sorry A** Apology Impacting Radio

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

On March 23rd RydazNrtisT’s first single “Sorry A** Apology” will hit Urban radio.

Make sure you call,tweet, e-mail or text your local Urban radio station and let them know that you want to hear them play “Sorry A** Apology”.

America’s Got Talent Show Tapings Across America

Friday, March 12th, 2010

NBC’s top-rated summer show “America’s Got Talent,” will tape shows in front of a live audience in cities across the country beginning this Friday, March 12, and Saturday, March 13, in Los Angeles. After Los Angeles, the #1 talent competition series will travel to Portland, Dallas, Orlando, New York and Chicago through March and April.

Host Nick Cannon, returning judges Sharon Osbourne and Piers Morgan as well as this season’s new judge, comedian Howie Mandel, will be at each taping.

To attend a taping please apply for tickets at: http://www.ocatv.com/. If viewers would still like to audition for season five, videos can be submitted online only at www.agtauditions.com.

Upcoming tape dates and locations are as follows:

LOS ANGELES
March 12-13
The Orpheum Theater
842 S. Broadway
Los Angeles, Calif. (more…)

Top-Ranked Nickelodeon Announces its 2010-11 Season Programming

Friday, March 12th, 2010

At its 2010 annual upfront presentation which featured top talent across the worlds of television, music and film, Nickelodeon today announced a slate of new programming that will be added to the network’s 2010-11 schedule, including: six new series and new seasons of 16 returning hits such as top-ranked iCarly, SpongeBob SquarePants and Team Umizoomi. Additionally, five brand-new series will bow across Nick’s digital nets, which include TeenNick, Nick Jr. and Nicktoons, during the 2010-11 season. Nickelodeon, the top-ranked basic cable network in total day for almost 16 years, is poised to close 1Q10 as its most-watched quarter ever in its 30-year history and just celebrated January as its most-watched month ever.

Held this morning at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City, Nickelodeon’s upfront presentation featured special guest appearances and contributions from: M. Night Shyamalan, director of Paramount Pictures’ and Nickelodeon Movies’ upcoming feature film The Last Airbender; Miranda Cosgrove, star of iCarly, basic (more…)

What Teens Want?

Monday, March 8th, 2010

What Teens Want? The age old question. Well Nick and others are about to tell you. Join Nick at the 12th annual What Teens Want conference, to learn how to create winning marketing strategies to reach teen consumers, so you can secure your share of the $216 billion in teen spending power.

The Conference takes place on May 12 & 13th, 2010 at the Edison Ballroom in New York City. Nick will attend day one of the conference.
From 12:00 – 12:30PM there will a KEYNOTE Q&A WITH NICK CANNON, CHAIRMAN, TEENNICK (more…)

Nick Cannon to host NBC’s fifth ‘Got Talent’

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

When ‘America’s Got Talent’ returns for its fifth season this June, Nick Cannon will be its host !

NBC sources confirmed the forthcoming season Friday, as well as Cannon’s return to the show he joined last summer (2009).

Sharon Osbourne and Piers Morgan return with Cannon while, Howie Mandel makes his debut, replacing David Hasselhoff.

‘America’s Got Talent’ follows Cannon’s ‘Wild N’ Out’ on MTV and roles in films like ‘Drumline,’ ‘Underclassman,’ and ‘Love Don’t Cost a Thing’.

‘America’s Got Talent,’ season five, premieres June 1 at 8/7c on NBC.

Ne-Yo, Nick Cannon Give Their Oscar Picks

Friday, March 5th, 2010

On Sunday night at the Oscars, will you be pulling for “Avatar,” “The Hurt Locker” or another film? Do you want to see front-runners Sandra Bullock (“The Blind Side”) and Jeff Bridges (“Crazy Heart”) triumph in the lead actor and actress categories, or are you hoping for an upset? Making Oscar picks is part of the fun of Hollywood’s biggest night, and even celebs like to take part. Tops among many of the folks we’ve spoken to recently was James Cameron’s “Avatar.”

“Cameron is the truth!” said Nick Cannon.

” ‘Avatar’ was fantastic!” Ne-Yo gushed.

But when it comes to the Best Picture and Supporting Actress categories, Cannon is supporting “Precious,” a film in which his wife, Mariah Carey, happens to have a meaty role.

“I definitely want to see ‘Precious’ win,” he said. “I believe Mo’Nique is going to take it, definitely. And I was a fan of ‘Avatar.’ I still think ‘Precious’ was a better movie, but ‘Avatar’ was a movement.”

Ne-Yo, meanwhile, is pulling for “Inglourious Basterds” to win Best Picture. 2007 Oscar nominee Amy Ryan counts one “Inglourious” performance as deserving of a supporting actor win. “I love Christoph Waltz,” she said. “I don’t think he needs any more help. He’s doing quite fine. There are so many incredible performances this year. Mo’Nique blew me away. That was such a ferocious, brave performance.”

“True Blood” star Stephen Moyer’s pick for Best Actor is Jeff Bridges in “Crazy Heart.”

“He’s my favorite actor. I absolutely love him,” said Moyer, adding of “The Hurt Locker,” “I think Jeremy Renner’s brilliant as well. I thought that was a great performance.”

Meanwhile, “Twilight” vampire Kellan Lutz admitted he hasn’t been keeping an eye on the Oscar horserace. “I’m so taking a backseat to all that,” Lutz said. “I Tivo my Animal Planet and my ‘How It’s Made’ shows. For me, I don’t know what movies are up for Oscars.”

Source: MTV News

School Gyrls scores #1 with Kids

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Nickelodeon Finishes Week with a Clean Sweep among Basic Cable Nets

with Kids and Total Viewers in Total Day

The Penguins of Madagascar Presidents Day special, “Dr. Blowhole’s Revenge,” guest-starring Neil Patrick Harris (Monday, Feb. 15, 8 p.m., ET/PT), topped all TV for the week with kids 2-11 (8.3/2.9 million) and kids 6-11 (9.9/2.1 million). The Penguins special also ranked among the top 10 telecasts (#6) on basic cable with total viewers (4.6 million) for the week. Year to date, The Penguins of Madagascar ranks as the number-two animated series on broadcast and basic cable with kids 2-11 and kids 6-11 (Source: NMR, Live + 7 Day, 12/28/09 – 2/7/10, Live + Same Day 2/8/10-2/21/10), second only to SpongeBob SquarePants.

Nickelodeon closed the week (2/15/10–2/21/10) as the number-one basic cable network in total day with kids 2-11 (3.8/1.3 million), kids 6-11 (3.3/706,000), and total viewers (2.4 million).

The Penguins of Madagascar (Feb. 15, 8 p.m. ET/PT) and SpongeBob SquarePants (Feb.15, 10:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. ET/PT) scored the top two animated telecasts on all TV for the week with kids 2-11 (8.3/2.9 million and 7.5/2.7 million, respectively) and kids 6-11 (9.9/2.1 million and 7.0/1.5 million, respectively).

TeenNick, Nickelodeon’s 24-hour TV network exclusively for and about teens, scored its most-watched week ever with total viewers, posting double-digit gains over last year’s like time period.

Additionally, the premiere of School Gyrls one-hour TV movie (Sunday, Feb. 20, 7 p.m. ET/PT) ranked as broadcast and basic cable’s number-one telecast with kids 2-11 (4.2/1.5 million) in its 7-8 p.m. time period and drew 2.9 million total viewers (+10%).


Source:
Nickelodeon

LA Times Reviews School Gyrls

Saturday, February 20th, 2010


Like much else in modern entertainment, a new “movie” premiering Sunday on Nickelodeon, is an element in a cross-platform marketing plan. (It is a movie in the sense that it is a stand-alone talking picture, not that it is any longer than your average hour of commercial-filled television.) That’s fine: I have no problem with being marketed to across platforms, as long as it’s done with verve and personality, and that’s the case here. It’s not as if show business has been ever an exercise in altruism.

Directed and co-written with visual and verbal wit by Nick Cannon, himself a product of the Nickelodeon star-making machinery and now the host of a New York City radio show, “America’s Got Talent,” and chairman of Teen Nick — an executive, not an honorary title — “School Gyrls” will also come at you as an eponymous urban-bubble gum group, a novel and a comic book. A single is already available for download from the usual places. Corporate pop constitutes a tradition now, and though the songs here may be calculated to a sonic millimeter, that doesn’t mean they aren’t also authentic.

The story is so thin as to be nearly invisible and peremptorily collapses into a weak ending — notwithstanding the inevitable Battle of the Good and Evil Dance Teams and an appearance by tween idol Justin Bieber, whose charm, to paraphrase an old blues line, the men don’t know but the girls 9-14 understand. And even by the standards of these things, there is a marked lack of interest in character development or emotional depth.

But all that really matters here are sass, sisterhood and not letting the cheerleaders grind you down. With its endorsement of flamboyant individualism and a cartoon cast of obstacles standing in the way of its expression, including a headmistress (Angie Stone) whose ever-present twin daughters speak in unison, the whole thing is closer in spirit to “Rock & Roll High School” than it is to “High School Musical.”

The School Gyrls themselves are fresh and appealing; I especially liked Mandy Moseley, reminiscent of a Nick heroine from the golden age of Clarissa explaining it all for you. “Look around, why doncha?” she says of her new school, a place that “specializes in turning out a bunch of cookie-cutter Martha Stewarts” (little Marthas suddenly appear) whose “idea of creativity is writing in cursive.”

She and fellow Gyrls Jacque Pyles and Monica Parales are cut from more colorful cloth. They customize their uniforms, dance in corridors and library stacks, sing into hairbrushes, paint a rainbow in their room, and do a lot of detention.

Is there a contradiction in stimulating young people’s rebellious independence even as you are manipulating them into buying your products? Possibly. But it’s better than merely manipulating them into buying a product, since in the deal you may help them grow up to be the sort of person you can’t manipulate into buying anything at all.

Source: LA Times