Straight Outta Compton, Vin Scully's call to be preserved by Library of Congress

mercredi 29 mars 2017

First it became the basis for an Oscar-nominated movie. Now, Straight Outta Compton — the groundbreaking album from rap group N.W.A. and a one-time flashpoint in the nation's culture wars — has been selected for the prestigious U.S. National Recording Registry.

The album was one of 25 additions to the registry announced Wednesday by the Library of Congress, and it wasn't the only one with a Los Angeles connection.

Baseball play-by-play from Vin Scully, who retired last year after calling Dodgers games for 67 years, will also join the national library's trove of recordings, which are selected for their historical, artistic or cultural significance

Vin Scully Signs Off

The library chose longtime baseball announcer Vin Scully's call of the final meeting between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants at Manhattan's Polo Grounds in 1957 for induction. Both teams would depart for California after that season, joined by Scully, who retired in 2016 after broadcasting his final major-league game for the Dodgers. (D. Ross Cameron/The Associated Press)

The library chose Scully's call of the final meeting between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants at Manhattan's Polo Grounds in 1957. Both teams would depart for California after that season.

"It's a rather imposing call to realize that something that you have done would technically live forever in the Library of Congress," Scully, 89, told The Associated Press from his home in Hidden Hills, Calif. 

"It was a particularly meaningful game for me anyway, so to have it picked up and put for posterity is rather humbling and, at the same time, overwhelming."

Plenty of standards are joining the registry too, including Judy Garland's version of Over the Rainbow, the Eagles' 1976 greatest-hits collection and Don McLean's elliptical 1971 folk song American Pie.

N.W.A.'s influential release

Released in 1988, Straight Outta Compton influenced a generation of rappers with its raw lyrics about gang violence and the drug trade in south central Los Angeles.

NWA Straight Outta Compton

Released in 1988, Straight Outta Compton influenced a generation of rappers with its raw, incendiary portrayal of gangs, drugs and violence in Los Angeles. It achieved platinum sales without radio airplay and captured the attention of America.

It achieved platinum sales without radio airplay and captured the attention of white America. The incendiary track F--k tha Police was denounced by right-wing politicians and prompted a warning letter from the FBI to the group's record label.

The album was also one of the first to receive a parental advisory label for explicit content, the outgrowth of a group started by Tipper Gore, then-wife of future vice president Al Gore. But the controversy has long since faded and critics consistently rank it as one of the best hip-hop albums ever made.

While N.W.A. brought the L.A. sound to the world of rap, Scully is an L.A. transplant who moved west with the Dodgers. He was 29 years old when he called his last game at the Polo Grounds, which was about 20 blocks from his grammar school, and he captured the melancholy of the moment.

"I wanted that game to take forever, which is a little different. Today, everyone talks about, and maybe not the fans, but certainly those of us broadcasting and writing, we're always talking about how long the game is. Baseball is now trying to see if they can't speed things up," Scully said.

"But as a kid way back, and even as a broadcaster, I remember saying, 'Take it easy fellas, be slow, let's squeeze all of the juice out of this game before we finally close the curtain on it.'"

Streisand's People, Bowie's Ziggy Stardust

Recordings picked for the registry are preserved at the library's vast audio-visual vault in Culpeper, Va. If they have already been preserved elsewhere, the library collaborates with those studios or archives to ensure they will be available to future generations.

This year's selections date back as far as 1888. That's when Col. George Gouraud, a Civil War hero and friend of Thomas Edison, used his newly acquired wax-cylinder phonograph to record the voices of prominent poets, scientists, musicians and politicians, including William Ewart Gladstone, the future prime minister of Britain, and Sir Arthur Sullivan of Gilbert & Sullivan.

Other additions to the registry include Barbra Streisand's 1964 recording of the song People, from the musical Funny Girl; the late David Bowie's 1972 concept album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars; the original-cast recording of the musical The Wiz (1975); and Sister Sledge's inclusive anthem We are Family (1979).

"I believe People touched our common desire to relate to others with love and caring, and I've always tried to express this in my renditions of this magical song," Streisand said in a statement.

Garland, too, felt the magic of Over the Rainbow, which was released as a single in 1939 after she sang the ballad in The Wizard of Oz. The song won an Academy Award, and she continued singing it throughout her career, crediting its "childlike, wistful quality" to composer Harold Arlen.

The Eagles, on the other hand, weren't too enthusiastic about Their Greatest Hits, which was released in 1976 against the band's wishes. But it became their biggest success and remains one of the top-selling albums of all time. The California soft-rock group was also recognized at last year's Kennedy Center Honors.

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Straight Outta Compton, Vin Scully's call to be preserved by Library of Congress

20 years after Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the Scooby gang reunites

Buffy Summers and her old pals from Sunnydale High are reuniting to celebrate the 20th birthday of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

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'This is like a high school reunion, but much worse because they all still look really great,' series creator Joss Whedon says of the reunion. (Warner Bros./Getty Images)

Series creator Joss Whedon talks with stars Sarah Michelle Gellar, Alyson Hannigan and 10 other cast members on EW Reunites: Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which premieres Wednesday on the streaming People/Entertainment Weekly Network .

"This is like a high school reunion, but much worse because they all still look really great," Whedon says.

He and series stars including David Boreanaz, Nicolas Brendon, Charisma Carpenter and Michelle Trachtenberg share memories of their days on the show and reflect on its enduring impact.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

TV's Buffy the Vampire Slayer premiered on March 10, 1997 and ran through 2003. The title character and her friends battled vampires, demons and other dark forces while navigating everyday struggles of young adults. (Getty Images)

Buffy the Vampire Slayer premiered in 1997 and ran through 2003. Its title character battled vampires, demons and other dark forces while navigating everyday teenage struggles.

Whedon was nominated for an Emmy for his writing on the show in 2000.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer Reunion

The show was 'the ultimate metaphor' for teens, said star Sarah Michelle Gellar. (Jordan Strauss/Invision/Associated Press)

The show was "the ultimate metaphor," Gellar says.

"It was utilizing the horrors of adolescence manifested through these actual monsters," she says.

"And I think that [for] everyone going through it, that's the hardest time of life and to understand that you're not alone through that."

The interview was filmed earlier this month in Los Angeles.

The reunited Buffy cast also appears on the cover of the upcoming issue of Entertainment Weekly magazine, available Friday.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer Reunion

Joss Whedon, seen second left during the taping of the series finale in 2003, was nominated for a writing Emmy for the show. (Damian Dovarganes/Associated Press)

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20 years after Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the Scooby gang reunites

Bob Dylan to accept Nobel honour this weekend in Stockholm

Nobel literature prize laureate Bob Dylan will meet with members of the Swedish Academy during a weekend visit to Stockholm and they will hand over his Nobel diploma and medal, the academy said Wednesday

Sara Danius, permanent secretary of the academy, said in a blog on the academy's website that Dylan will not give his Nobel lecture during the weekend but that a recorded version would be sent at a later date.

She noted that taped Nobel lectures are occasionally presented, most recently in 2013 by Canadian Nobel literature laureate Alice Munro.

Danius said that the academy "is very much looking forward to the weekend" and will attend a Dylan concert, but added that the setting of their meeting will be "small and intimate, and no media will be present," in line with his wishes.

The 75-year-old Dylan, who was awarded the prize "for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition," declined an invitation last year to the traditional Nobel Prize banquet and ceremony on Dec. 10 — the date of Alfred Nobel's death — pleading other commitments. He is performing concerts in Stockholm both Saturday and Sunday. 

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Bob Dylan to accept Nobel honour this weekend in Stockholm

'It was a shock': Residential school survivor sees her painting more than 50 years later

It was a way to express the horrors she went through at residential school. It was cathartic.

That is how Gina Laing describes the after-hours art classes she attended at the residential school in Port Alberni.

A member of the Uchucklesaht Tribe, Laing was recently reunited with art she painted more than 50 years ago.

Laing's paintings were part of a collection donated to the University of Victoria in 2008 by the family of Robert Aller, the teacher who led the extracurricular art classes at the school.

As part of the era of reconciliation, staff at the university decided to start an initiative to reunite students with their paintings. 

After being tracked down by university staff, Laing describes seeing her painting The Beach for the first time since she created it at the age of 11.

"It was a shock," Laing told host Gregor Craigie on CBC's On the Island

"I was very emotional when I saw the painting because I remembered immediately why I had painted it.

"The painting was of the beach at my home at my reservation. I left out the houses because I had bad pictures, bad ideas, bad thoughts about the homes down there because I knew what was going on in most of them."

Gina Laing

Gina Laing's painting 'The Beach' will be displayed at the Canadian Museum of History in Hull, Quebec. (April Thompson)

I was always afraid

Laing describes the art class as 'life saving', saying she probably wouldn't have survived residential school without the chance to express herself.

"The way things were going while I was at residential school, it was terrifying at points. And there was always pressure to perform the way they wanted you to, and I always was afraid."

Laing does, however, have fond memories of Aller, who she says gave the children creative freedom.

"He was a wonderful man," Laing said.

"He would walk around behind us with his hands behind his back, sometimes he would be humming a tune, and he never ever made us do anything.

"He asked questions like, 'Where is the sun? Where is the light coming from? How far away is that?', so you actually used your own mind."

Andrea Walsh is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Victoria and she helped reunite residential school survivors with their artwork.

He taught them how to paint, not what to paint

Walsh says Aller was an artist who trained under Arthur Lismer, a member of the Group of Seven.

"The classes were really unique," Walsh said, "He never taught the children what to paint. He taught them how to paint. In the classes too, he allowed them to think through what they wanted to."

As to whether he knew about the abuse going on at residential schools, Walsh believes his memoirs make it clear he had an understanding.

Port Alberni residential school

Gina Laing attended the Port Alberni Indian Residential School which is infamous for its brutal treatment of students. (April Thompson)

" 'The Indian child is not a drop-out, he has been pushed out," Walsh recalled reading in Aller's memoirs.

"To me, this is a marker that Mr. Aller understood these children had incredible potential and the system was not allowing them to realize it. And I think that through his art classes he hoped that a little bit of that potential, they would see in themselves."

The artwork by the residential school survivors is currently on display at Alberni District Secondary School.

As part of the celebrations for Canada's 150th anniversary, it will be exhibited at the Canadian Museum of History in Hull, Quebec.

With files from On the Island

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'It was a shock': Residential school survivor sees her painting more than 50 years later

3 dead as freelance tornado chasers for Weather Channel crash vehicles

mardi 28 mars 2017

Three storm chasers were killed when their vehicles collided at a rural crossroads during severe West Texas storms on Tuesday.

The storms spawned multiple funnel clouds and an occasional tornado in open areas of West Texas on Tuesday afternoon. No damage was reported.

The crash happened at a remote intersection near the town of Spur, about 85 kilometres southeast of Lubbock. Tornadoes had been reported nearby at the time of the crash and heavy rain had been reported in the area, according to the National Weather Service.

The Texas Department of Public Safety identified the three storm chasers killed as Kelley Gene Williamson, 57, and Randall Delane Yarnall, 55, both of Cassville, Missouri, and Corbin Lee Jaeger, 25, of Peoria, Arizona.

DPS Sgt. John Gonzalez said the Chevrolet Suburban driven by Williamson ran a stop sign and slammed into the Jeep driven by Yarnall with Jaeger as passenger. All three were killed instantly.

On Wednesday, the threat shifts eastward, and forecasters say about 19 million people in Arkansas, Texas and Louisiana could see stormy weather, including the possibility of strong tornadoes.

The Weather Channel in the U.S. expressed its condolences in a statement on Tuesday night, saying two of the men were freelancers for the network.

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3 dead as freelance tornado chasers for Weather Channel crash vehicles

Bill Cosby's lawyers ask to exclude testimony on other women, pills

Bill Cosby's lawyers don't want jurors at his suburban Philadelphia sexual-assault trial to hear he gave women quaaludes, money or educational funds.

The defense says in court papers filed Tuesday that Cosby's deposition testimony about those topics would prejudice the jury.

Cosby acknowledged in a decade-old deposition he gave a woman quaaludes and a string of women alcohol or pills before sex. And he said he offered some accusers money or educational funds.

But the judge has ruled most of those women can't testify in his trial. So the defense wants his deposition testimony about them excluded as well.

Cosby is charged with drugging and molesting a Temple University basketball team manager in 2004. He has pleaded not guilty.

He's set to go on trial June 5.

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Bill Cosby's lawyers ask to exclude testimony on other women, pills

Margaret Atwood expands The Handmaid's Tale for audiobook

Margaret Atwood hasn't quite finished telling The Handmaid's Tale.

The Canadian author has provided additional material for a special audio edition coming out next week exclusively from audio producer and distributor Audible.com, which is owned by Amazon.com. The audiobook expands upon a version released in 2012 and narrated by Claire Danes, Audible told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

Atwood's novel, as related through a handmaid known as "Offred," imagines a dystopian republic named Gilead in which women have lost their rights and even their identities.

The original book ends with a section called "Historical Notes," a 22nd-century academic symposium discussing the now-fallen Gilead and the ordeal of Offred, who had recorded her story on a set of cassette tapes. "Are there any questions?" is the final line.

"The roots of The Handmaid's Tale are in audio — Offred's story was recorded, not written, and even the 'Historical Notes' are a voice — so I was excited to extend the story for Audible with additional material meant specifically to be heard," Atwood said in a statement.

BOOKS Margaret Atwood 20140908

Revisiting the final scene of The Handmaid's Tale 'was an engrossing challenge,' said Margaret Atwood. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

"The Handmaid's Tale ends with 'Are there any questions?' With this new special audio edition, I've added the questions and answers that I think the people at that symposium, occurring in 2195, might ask. It was an engrossing challenge for me to revisit that last scene of the book and address some questions that I know many readers and listeners have had, over the years, after finishing The Handmaid's Tale."

Atwood's prize-winning novel was first published in 1985, but has returned to bestseller charts as part of a wave of works on the loss of democracy that has sold strongly since the election of Donald Trump as president.

Interest in The Handmaid's Tale has become even greater in anticipation of a new adaptation, released through the Hulu streaming service, that is scheduled for release in late April and stars Elisabeth Moss as Offred.

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Margaret Atwood expands The Handmaid's Tale for audiobook

Family files lawsuit in Canadian filmmaker's Florida Keys dive death

The family of a Canadian filmmaker and conservationist who died during a shark filming excursion in the Florida Keys has filed a wrongful death lawsuit.

The lawsuit filed Tuesday in the death of 37-year-old Rob Stewart blames negligence on the companies and individuals who organized the January dive.

The lawsuit claims Stewart disappeared while dive organizers were focused on treating his dive companion after both encountered breathing difficulties.

Unspecified damages are being sought by the lawsuit filed in Broward County, Fla., Circuit Court.

Stewart, of Toronto, was diving off the coast of Islamorada, Fla., to film a followup to his 2006 documentary Sharkwater, which examined the impact of shark hunting on the ocean's ecosystem.

He also made a 2013 documentary "Revolution" about environmental collapse and was a wildlife photographer.

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Drake's More Life smashes records, including his own

He started from the bottom, but now Drake's sitting atop the music charts again. More Life, the Toronto rapper's latest release, is officially a record-breaker.

The 22-track album, which Drake has described as a "playlist" project, set a new U.S. record for most online streams from a single album in one week, with 385 million streams recorded across all platforms.

More Life leaped past the current record holder: Drake's last album Views, which had previously garnered 245 million streams in a week, according to Nielsen Music. The 2016 figure helped him earn the title of Spotify's most streamed artist of the year.

First-week sales of 505,000 copies also lifted the Juno and Grammy-winning rapper's new album to the top spot on the Billboard 200, making More Life his seventh consecutive album to debut at No. 1 on the albums sales chart, according to Billboard.

All of More Life's tracks made it onto the latest Billboard Hot 100 tally of the past week's most popular songs across all genres (determined through radio airplay, sales and streaming data).

Coupled with two additional entries featuring Drake, the hip hop star's 24 songs on the current chart breaks the record (again, previously held by Drake) for the most simultaneous songs on the charts.

He's also now become the solo artist with the most tracks to ever pop up on the Hot 100 in the chart's nearly six-decade history: he's had 154 songs appear in the weekly list, surpassing rapper Lil Wayne's 135 and rock icon Elvis Presley's 108.

Released March 18, More Life sees Drake sample with a more diverse, globally inspired sound — a decision that has sparked some debate over cultural appropriation. The release features contributions from a host of collaborators, including Kanye West, Lil Wayne, 2 Chainz and PartyNextDoor and British singers Sampha and Jorja Smith. 

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Drake's More Life smashes records, including his own

From loon calls to streetcar squeaks, CanadaSound aims to make library of Canadian noises

The roar of a snowblower. An orca's breath underwater. Bed sheets on a laundry line, snapping in the Newfoundland wind. A new project is hoping to round up Canadian noises like these to make a soundscape of the country. 

The project's called CanadaSound and the plan is to have people submit their Canadian noises to an online database, which can then be accessed by musicians making new music. It is a collaboration between CBC Music and other Canadian arts and culture groups.

CBC's Grant Lawrence is one of the project's ambassadors. He'll be sifting through the sounds and showcasing stories about some of the best ones for both a new CBC podcast and a special CBC Radio show to air on Canada Day.

"We are looking for the sounds that only a Canadian ear would recognize," he said.

"It's going to be different for every different person [and region], which is a really great thing."

He said the result will be a "coast-to-coast-to-coast soundscape."

What Canada sounds like at 150

Although the project officially launched Tuesday, Lawrence has already received submissions. He's expecting a lot of stereotypical Canadian nature sounds, like loon calls, but is hoping people think outside the box, too.

"I've been told, but I haven't heard it yet, that the northern lights actually make a sound," he said, adding that he hopes someone will capture and send it in.

"I think it's an atmospheric crackle."

As more sounds are sent in, musicians will start drawing from the library. Some have already signed up to make songs, including Burlington, Ont. band Walk Off the Earth and Montreal pop singer Karl Wolf. The best tunes will be gathered on a digital album, with proceeds to go to music education charity MusiCounts.

Submissions will be accepted until the end of the 2017, so the library can include sounds from all seasons. After that, it will be handed over to the Department of Canadian Heritage for future use.

Grant Lawrence's advice for getting good sounds

  • If it is a small, subtle sound, "try to get as close ... as possible."
  • If it is windy, turn your back to the wind and then hit record.
  • If you are using a camera to get it, "film side-to-side" to get the whole scene.

Along with Canadian Heritage and CBC Music, the project's partners also include the Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (CARAS), the Juno Awards, SOCAN and Cleansheet Communications, where the idea originated.

Lawrence thinks it is a fitting gift for Canada as it turns 150.

"Sounds disappear," he said. "The sounds of 2017 are different than the sounds of 1950, or 1967 or 1867."

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From loon calls to streetcar squeaks, CanadaSound aims to make library of Canadian noises

Will Smith briefly reunites with Fresh Prince castmates

Will Smith has reunited with his Fresh Prince of Bel Air castmates.

Alfonso Ribeiro, who played Smith's Tom Jones-loving cousin Carlton on the 1990s sitcom, posted a picture on Instagram on Monday of the cast getting together.

Joined by Smith and Ribeiro were Tatyana Ali, Karyn Parsons, Daphne Reid and Joseph Marcell. James Avery, who had the role of Smith's Uncle Phil, died in late 2013.

Ribeiro writes in the caption that it's "always amazing to spend an afternoon with my Fresh Prince family."

He says he wishes that Avery were there "to make this complete."

Fans of the show may not want to get their hopes up for a series revival. Smith told E! News last year that a reboot of the series that aired for six seasons on NBC will happen "pretty close to when hell freezes over." 

Fresh Prince cast

The Fresh Prince of Bel Air cast members, from left, James Avery, Daphne Maxwell Reid, Karyn Parsons, Tatyana Ali, Will Smith and Alfonso Ribeiro are seen at the 2005 BET Awards in Hollywood. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters)

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Netflix's anti-piracy team aims to make stealing content uncool

​Netflix is getting tough on piracy.

The streaming service giant reveals its plan of attack in an online job posting seeking someone with legal and internet piracy experience to manage its newly created Global Copyright Protection Group.

Based in Los Angeles, the group's mission is to stop people from accessing online its original content without paying for it. In recent years, Netflix has had much success with its own series such as Stranger Things, House of Cards and The Crown.

According to the job posting, the manager's duties will include improving the company's attempts to get "rogue pirate sites" to remove unauthorized Netflix content.

Streaming Fight

Netflix is hiring someone to manage its global anti-piracy team, which aims to protect its original content. (Elise Amendola/Associated Press)

The new recruit will also "consider solutions to deal with new piracy models" such as fully loaded Android boxes that allow users to easily stream pirated shows and movies on their TVs.

But the posting explains that the group's ultimate goal is not to round up every pirate. Instead, it's to reduce online piracy to "a socially unacceptable fringe activity."

How the streaming service will make piracy uncool is yet to be revealed. The California-based company did not respond to a request for comment.

The manager's job duties will include analyzing piracy trends and working with a consumer insights team on "piracy messaging projects."

'You wouldn't steal a car'

It's not surprising Netflix is trying to protect its growing stockpile of original content, says technology lawyer David Fewer.

"If you've got intellectual property you want to protect, the way the law is set up, you've got to police your own property."

But the lawyer questions Netflix's plan to make piracy "socially unacceptable."

"I'm a little skeptical," says Fewer, who is the director of the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic.

"Certainly any kind of global groups that have tried that have had a difficult time of it."

He points to the Motion Picture Association of America's now infamous anti-piracy video that debuted in the mid-2000s. It often popped up during the opening sequence of DVD movies.

The ad shows someone illegally downloading a movie and states that you wouldn't steal a car, a handbag, a TV, or an actual movie from the video store. Then it informs the viewer that "downloading pirated films is stealing."

Netflix piracy stealing a car

A scene from the MPAA ad that shows someone stealing a car. (MPAA/YouTube/haxorcat)

Instead of convincing masses of people to stop illegal downloading, the ad became a source of ridicule. "It's almost a joke line now," says Fewer, referring to the phrase, "You wouldn't steal a car."

The line even found its way into the Urban Dictionary, an open-contribution online slang and phrase resource. It describes the ad as "an idiotic PSA comparing pirating a 1 GB movie file and stealing a full blown $50k+ 2 ton vehicle."

"Industry-led efforts to influence norms around unauthorized access to content have always come off heavy-handed," says Fewer. Therefore they tend not to serve their purpose, he adds.

"So I would be skeptical if Netflix would have any more success than anyone else."

Netflix piracy video steal a car

A scene from the MPAA video which compares illegally downloading a movie to stealing a car. (MPAA/YouTube/haxorcat)

If social pressure fails, Netflix has other methods to curb piracy. The newly appointed manager will also oversee the company's "notice and takedown" efforts.

In the U.S., content owners can force websites to take down pirated copies of its content that people stream or download for free.

Netflix is also trying to make it harder to find pirated material online. 

The plan of attack: The global anti-piracy company, Vobile, on behalf of Netflix, reports to Google links to pirated content and asks the search giant to remove them from search results. That way, the unauthorized material is much harder to find.

It's just one of the creative weapons content creators of all sorts are using to stamp out piracy.

According to Google's Transparency Report, in just one month — from Feb. 27 to March 27 — Vobile made requests to remove more than 76,000 links to allegedly pirated content where "Netflix" is the copyright owner.

How about offering an alternative?

Making pirated material more difficult to find can be an effective plan of attack, says Fewer. But he adds that trying to eliminate unauthorized downloading and streaming is often a losing battle.

"The frustrating thing about online piracy and this whole debate is, anybody who wants to can take the steps to find content without having to pay for it."

He believes the best way to combat piracy is not through ads or takedown notices, but instead by offering an inexpensive, convenient way to watch TV.

"Make it good, make it more attractive than the alternative," says Fewer. "I think that does more than anything else to change norms around how you access content."

Even Netflix has subscribed to this idea, at one time claiming that its low-cost streaming service was helping curb illegal activity.

"There's been a notable reduction in piracy in countries where we operate such as the U.S. and Canada," company spokeswoman Marlee Tart told CBC News in 2015.

"Ultimately, people steal content because they can't get it otherwise," she said.

Since last year, Netflix has also been cracking down on people who hop virtual borders to watch shows and movies restricted to other countries.

Because of regional licencing agreements, Netflix customers in one country — say Canada — get access to less content than another country like the United States.

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Netflix's anti-piracy team aims to make stealing content uncool

The Handmaid's Tale lands Canadian broadcaster

lundi 27 mars 2017

A highly anticipated adaptation of Margaret Atwood's dystopian novel The Handmaid's Tale has landed a Canadian broadcaster.

The 10-episode first season of the Toronto-shot drama will debut on Bravo in a special two-hour premiere event on April 30, four days after it hits the streaming service Hulu in the U.S.

The one-hour show will continue to air on subsequent Sundays.

The entire first season will also launch on Bell Media's video streaming service CraveTV this spring, following the airing of the season finale on Bravo.

Elisabeth Moss, Joseph Fiennes, Samira Wiley, Max Minghella and Alexis Bledel are among the stars of the series.

The story is set in a totalitarian society ruled by a fundamentalist regime that treats women as property of the state.

Toronto-based Atwood, whose 1985 novel The Handmaid's Tale won a Governor General's Literary Award, is a consulting producer. 

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The Handmaid's Tale lands Canadian broadcaster

Orange Is The New Black romance: actress, producer-writer marry

An actress and producer-writer from Orange Is The New Black have married.

Actress Samira Wiley, who starred as the character Poussey Washington on the Netflix show, and Lauren Morelli wedded Saturday in Palm Springs, where they were engaged.

Publicist Scott Boute says both women wore gowns designed by Christian Siriano.

Wiley, 29, will also appear in the upcoming series The Handmaid's Tale, based on the 1985 novel by Canadian author Margaret Atwood that depicts New England under a totalitarian theocracy.

Morelli, 34, has worked as a writer, story editor and producer of Orange Is The New Black, which depicts life inside a women's prison, since 2014. 

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Orange Is The New Black romance: actress, producer-writer marry

Massive $1M gold Canadian coin stolen in Berlin

Berlin police say thieves broke into the German capital's Bode Museum and made off with a massive 100-kilogram gold coin issued by the Royal Canadian Mint that's worth millions.

Dubbed the "Big Maple Leaf" and measuring three-centimetres thick with a diameter of 53 centimetres, the coin has a portrait of the Queen on one side and maple leaves on the other.

It has a face value of $1 million, but by weight alone it would be worth almost $4.5 million US at market prices.

The museum says the coin is in the Guinness Book of Records for its purity of 999.99/1000 gold.

Spokesman Stefen Petersen said thieves apparently entered through a window at about 3:30 a.m. local time on Monday, broke into a cabinet where the coin was kept, and escaped with it before police arrived.

A ladder was found by nearby railway tracks.

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Massive $1M gold Canadian coin stolen in Berlin

'I don't know if I will ever tour again,' vows Adele

Adele fans who didn't catch her on her current world tour, which is winding down now, may be out of luck in the future.

During Sunday night's show in Auckland, Adele told the audience that "touring isn't something I'm good at" and she doesn't know if she "will ever tour again," according to The New Zealand Herald. 

The concert was Adele's last one before she formally finishes the tour in her hometown of London.

She's set to play four sold-out dates at Wembley Stadium this summer.

Adele sang through heavy rain at the outdoor show in Auckland on Sunday.

Photos show her in a drenched dress for part of the concert and also donning a plastic poncho.

She joked that she "just spent two hours in hair and makeup for nothing."

In interviews over the years, the singer and mother of a young son has expressed reservations about the gruelling life of touring, as well as her anxiety about massive audiences and concern about her voice.

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'I don't know if I will ever tour again,' vows Adele

Antonio Banderas says he's recovered from a heart attack

dimanche 26 mars 2017

Spanish film star Antonio Banderas says he has recovered from a heart attack that he had in January.

The 56-year-old Banderas tells Spanish media that "I suffered a heart attack on Jan. 26, but it wasn't serious and hasn't caused any damage."

Banderas says he underwent a procedure to place three stents in his arteries, adding that "it hasn't been as dramatic as some have written."

Banderas' visit to a Swiss clinic had led to speculation about the health of the star known for roles in such films as The Mask of ZorroDesperado, Philadelphia and the animated Puss in Boots.

Banderas spoke Saturday at a film festival in his hometown of Malaga in southern Spain, where he received a lifetime achievement award for his career as an actor, director and producer.

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Antonio Banderas says he's recovered from a heart attack

Petition to boycott Netflix's 'whitewashed' Death Note nears 10,000 supporters

A petition calling for the boycott of Netflix's upcoming movie Death Note because of casting decisions is getting close to its goal of 10,000 signatures.

The move comes after a trailer for the film, which is based on the popular Japanese manga series with the same title, was released earlier this week and revealed white actors in the lead roles. Three of the film's producers are of Asian descent.

The teaser shows The Fault In Our Stars actor Nat Wolff cast in the main role of Light Turner, a student who gets his hands on a supernatural notebook that allows him to kill anyone he can identify by name and face. The character in the original series is named Light Yagami.

Playing the private detective chasing him is black actor LaKeith "Keith" Stanfield. The Leftovers'  Margaret Qualley plays the female lead.

The revelation sparked backlash from some people on social media and prompted an online petition.

"Death Note shouldn't be cast with all white actors — as it goes against the very soul of the story," wrote the petition's instigator on Care2, Sarah Rose, who referred to the American adaptation as "whitewashed."

Numbers don't lie

While the petition itself might not hold a lot of power, it points to an ongoing problem in the entertainment industry.

The lack of representation when it comes to Asian actors in particular was highlighted in a recent report from the University of Southern California.

Between 2007 and 2015, the study found only a 3.9 per cent increase in the number of Asian characters in Hollywood's most popular films.

Another study from the same university pointed out that Asian actors accounted for 5.1 per cent of speaking or named roles in 2014, making them significantly under-represented on screen.

Actors speak out

The issue has also been cited by actors in the industry.

Constance Wu, known for her role on the series Fresh Off The Boat, slammed the casting of Matt Damon in the epic film The Great Wall, about a European warrior in China during the Song Dynasty.

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Actress Constance Wu was critical of the casting of Matt Damon in the epic film The Great Wall. (Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

"We have to stop perpetuating the racist myth that a only [sic] white man can save the world," she wrote in a Twitter message last year.

Edward Zo, an up-and-coming actor, posted a video message on YouTube in 2015 claiming he was told told not to audition for the American adaptation of Death Note because he was Asian.

A spokesperson says Netflix isn't commenting on the film, which is set to be released in August.​

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Petition to boycott Netflix's 'whitewashed' Death Note nears 10,000 supporters

Popular Fearless Girl statue might stay on Wall Street

Should the Fearless Girl stand up to Wall Street's charging bull forever?

That's the question New York City officials are facing after a statue of a pony-tailed girl in a windblown dress went up in front of the bronze bull early this month and immediately became a tourist draw and Internet sensation.

What was intended as a temporary display to encourage corporations to put more women on their boards is now getting a second look in light of its popularity, which has spawned an online petition seeking to keep it.

But does keeping the girl past her scheduled April 2 deadline forever alter the meaning of the bull? After all, the 3.3 metre, 3,200 kilogram bull has been hugely popular in its own right; it was placed in a lower Manhattan traffic median in the wake of the 1987 stock market crash as a symbol of Americans' financial resilience and can-do spirit.

Fearless Girl Wall Street

A woman poses for photos with the Charging Bull statue in New York. Since 1989, the bronze bull has stood in New York City's financial district as an image of the might and hard-charging spirit of Wall Street. (Mark Lennihan/The Associated Press)

'Message of women's power'

Some fans of the bronze girl already see the bull much differently.

"The bull represents men and power," says Cristina Pogorevici, 18, a student from Bucharest, Romania, who visited the statues this past week. "So she is a message of women's power and things that are changing in the world right now."

Holli Sargeant, 20, a visitor from Queensland, Australia, says the 4-foot-tall, 250-pound bronze girl "is standing up against something and we see her as powerful image. She represents all the young women in the world that want to make a difference."

Fearless Girl Wall Street

Two women pose with the Fearless Girl statue in New York. Pressure is mounting on the city to let the Fearless Girl stay beyond its April 2 deadline. (Mark Lennihan/The Associated Press)

Bull artist outraged

Such shifting perceptions of the bull — from American hero to villain of sorts — outrage bull sculptor Arturo De Modica, who wants the girl gone.

He dismissed Kristen Visbal's statue as nothing more than an "an advertising trick," noting the bronze was a marketing effort on the eve of the March 8 International Women's Day by Boston-based State Street Global Advisors and its New York advertising firm, McCann.

As for his bull, "I put it there for art," the Italian-born sculptor told MarketWatch, which first reported his anger. "My bull is a symbol for America. My bull is a symbol of prosperity and for strength."

Girl has changed meaning of bull 'forever'

Visbal, the artist behind the girl statue, said she could not comment without the permission of State Street Global Advisors, whose spokesman did not return phone calls.

A spokesman for New York City, which controls public art in the area, did not say when a decision would be made. Mayor Bill de Blasio has said only that he would try to prolong the girl's presence, but has not yet said whether she could stay permanently.

Fearless Girl Wall Street

The installation of the girl defiantly standing in the bull's path has transformed the meaning of one of New York's best-known public artworks. (Mark Lennihan/The Associated Press)

David Levi Strauss of Manhattan's School of Visual Arts, known for his writings about the impact of art on society and politics, says he is excited by the dynamics the girl statue has brought to the space and agrees the overall meaning has shifted.

"The girl has changed the meaning of the bull forever," he says. "With public art like this, you never know what's going to happen; it's a Rorschach test onto which people are projecting their own opinions and feelings."

When it comes to the girl facing the bull, Strauss said, "the bull's stature diminishes. She's the individual standing up to the beast of power. ... She's frozen in a sort of dream of winning, and that's what appeals to people. She's irresistible."

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Popular Fearless Girl statue might stay on Wall Street

More TV streaming services join U.S. market, leaving Canada far behind

YouTube's announcement that it will soon launch an online TV streaming service cut deep for some Canadians. That's because it's not coming here.

YouTube TV will offer more than 40 live TV channels for only $35 US a month. The service joins a long list of low-cost streaming options available in the U.S. but not in Canada.

They include on-demand TV and movie services like HBO Now, Starz, Hulu and the newly added British offering BritBox.

'We don't have access to the same things they have.'- Amy Leaman

Live programming streaming services already in play include DirecTV Now, Sling and PlayStation Vue. Hulu also plans to add a live service in the spring.

Netflix and Amazon are exceptions that offer streaming services in both Canada and U.S. However, American customers still win out with bigger content libraries.

"It's frustrating," says Amy Leaman who would like nothing more than to sign up for the U.S. service HBO Now to stream her beloved show, Game of Thrones.

"It feels like the border at times is invisible and all of a sudden — wait a second — we're not the same country," says Leaman, who lives in Toronto. "We don't have access to the same things they have."

Meanwhile, across the border in a Detroit suburb, Game of Thrones fan Steve Elliott watches all his favourite TV series on streaming services.

He uses HBO Now and Netflix and has also subscribed to Hulu in the past.

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Canadians have to sign up for a top-tier cable package to legally watch new episodes of Game of Thrones. (HBO)

"I get everything I want, I'm saving loads of money, I'm barely missing anything," says Elliott. He used to pay around $100 a month for cable and now pays about one-quarter that amount.  

"Cable's a waste of money right now. Even my parents, they quit cable and they're streaming."

No rights? No service

So why can't Canadians have access to more U.S. streaming services — at least through legimate means?

It's all about rights ownership, says Canadian television expert and Ryerson University instructor Irene Berkowitz.

Content creators often divvy up the rights to their product country by country, she explains.

"That's exactly the way television programs have been monetized since the invention of television."

YouTube undoubtedly acquired the rights from networks like NBC and Fox to stream their live channels in the U.S., says Berkowitz.

But they can't do the same in this country because various Canadian broadcasters have bought the rights to different U.S. shows from each network.

"They're sort of jumbled up and owned by different legacy players," says Berkowitz.

cord cutting tv

Canadians' access to streaming services is limited and recently the country lost a major player, Shomi. (CBC)

When the rights to a show are acquired by a Canadian player, there's no guarantee it will show up on a streaming service here.

One obstacle: a broadcaster may profit more by offering a show only on cable.

"Everybody makes more money if you buy it as a cable package, so that's one reason they keep from putting it online," say Greg O'Brien, editor of broadcasting news site Cartt.ca.

There may also be cases where a Canadian network only gets broadcast rights but not streaming rights for a particular show, he says.

As for homegrown streaming services, the only two major offerings are Bell's CraveTV and Rogers' Sportsnet Now.

Another player, the Rogers-Shaw streaming service Shomi, shut down in November.

"It's an expensive thing to set up," says O'Brien about the streaming service business.

Game of Thrones only on cable

CraveTV continues to beef up its library, adding popular series like True Detective, Billions, True Blood and The Affair.

But Bell will continue to face criticism from Canadians for not adding HBO favourites like Game of Thrones despite owning the rights to all HBO content in Canada.

Instead, the only way for Canadians to legitimately access new episodes of the hit series is by subscribing to a top-tier cable package.

Bell told CBC News that while Game of Thrones is currently available only to cable subscribers, "We continue to assess the market."

"It's exceptionally annoying — and it's shocking to me that it even works that way," says Leaman, who refuses to sign up for cable just to watch the series.

She believes the idea of national TV rights is outdated and the time has come to offer streaming options for content on a global scale.

"Something's going to have to give, because I don't see how in a global context that you can hold onto these things," says Leaman. "It gets really silly after a while."

Global content is coming

Berkowitz says the shift away from country-based rights is already happening and will continue to do so in the digital age.

"Television is really taking a while to transition to the online era," she says. "Regardless of the time frame of how long it takes, the trend is toward a global content delivery structure."

Netflix is already making much of its original content, including Narcos and The Crown, available to subscribers across the globe.

Claire Foy in The Crown

Netflix now makes much of its original content, including The Crown, available to subscribers across the globe. (Netflix)

Although the streaming service is cracking down on people trying to access shows restricted to other countries, Netflix says its ultimate aim is global access. "That's the goal we will keep pushing towards," it stated in a blog post last year.

There's a chance more U.S. streaming services will launch in Canada once they acquire the necessary rights. But the best hope for Canadians may be the transformation of the industry to a global rights system that some industry experts believe is inevitable.

"[Canadians] just want to watch great television in the cheapest, easiest and most convenient way possible," says Berkowitz.

"And they have every right to expect that in the transparent, open world we live in."

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More TV streaming services join U.S. market, leaving Canada far behind

Mindy Kaling's Newark joke leads to dinner with U.S. politician Cory Booker

samedi 25 mars 2017

A joke about Newark, New Jersey, on The Mindy Project led to dinner plans between U.S. Sen. Cory Booker and star Mindy Kaling.

Her character joked after hearing that Booker had come to her colleague's event that "I guess anything to get out of Newark, huh?"

Booker tweeted "Ouch!" at Kaling on Thursday. He added that he still loved her, though.

She responded that if her character "shades" it, "it means we know it's cool," and said the love was mutual.

Booker then asked her to dinner in Newark. She asked for a train schedule, which the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey quickly sent her.

Booker called Kaling "Lyft worthy" and promised to send one. Booker's spokesman says the date hasn't yet been scheduled. 

Read the Twitter exchange below.

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Mindy Kaling's Newark joke leads to dinner with U.S. politician Cory Booker

Public memorial service to honour Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds

Stars and fans will gather Saturday for a public memorial to honour late actresses Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher nearly three months after their deaths.

The ceremony honouring the lives of the mother-daughter duo will be held at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills, the storied cemetery that is their final resting place.

People will be granted attendance at the event on a first-come, first-served basis, and it will be live-streamed on http://ift.tt/2hPfdlb beginning at 1 p.m. PT.

The ceremony is slated to feature music by James Blunt and Star Wars composer John Williams and display Hollywood memorabilia that Reynolds collected throughout her life.

Fisher, 60, an actress and writer who starred as Princess Leia in the original Star Wars trilogy, died Dec. 27 after suffering a medical emergency days earlier aboard a flight from London.

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Fisher, seen here in 2011, died Dec. 27 at the age of 60 after suffering a medical emergency onboard a flight. (Chris Pizzello/The Associated Press)

Reynolds, 84, an Oscar-nominated actress who shot to fame after starring in Singin' in the Rain at age 19, died the following day after being briefly hospitalized.

"She said, 'I want to be with Carrie,"' Reynolds' son, Todd Fisher, told The Associated Press after his mother's death. "And then she was gone."

Debbie Reynolds headshot

Debbie Reynolds, seen here in 2011, died at age 84 within days of her daughter's death. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)

The back-to-back deaths of two prominent actresses were stunning, but they were made even more poignant by the women's complex history. Fisher and Reynolds had a strained relationship that Fisher explored in her writing, but they later reconciled and became trusted confidantes brought closer by painful events in their lives.

Reynolds lost one husband to Elizabeth Taylor, and two other husbands plundered her for millions. Fisher struggled with addiction and mental illness, which she candidly described in books and interviews.

Fisher died after finishing work on The Last Jedi, the eighth film in the core Star Wars saga.

Disney CEO Bob Iger said this week that Fisher appears throughout the film, and her performance will not be changed.

Reynolds earned an Oscar nomination for her starring role in The Unsinkable Molly Brown.

The actresses participated in an HBO documentary on their lives called Bright Lights, which aired in January.

Todd Fisher organized Saturday's memorial to give fans an opportunity to honour his mother and sister. Fisher's daughter, actress Billie Lourd, is expected to attend.

Stars including Meryl Streep, Tracey Ullman and Stephen Fry mourned the actresses at a private memorial in January.

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Public memorial service to honour Carrie Fisher, Debbie Reynolds

Harrison Ford says he was 'distracted' when he flew over plane last month

Actor Harrison Ford said he was distracted and concerned about turbulence from another aircraft last month when he mistakenly landed on a taxiway at a Southern California airport after flying low over an airliner with 116 people aboard, according to an audio recording released Friday.

"I'm the schmuck who landed on the taxiway," Ford told an air traffic controller shortly after the near-miss on Feb. 13 at John Wayne Airport in Orange County.

Recordings released

Recordings of Ford's conversations with air traffic controllers were released Friday by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration.

The 74-year-old actor was told to land his single-engine plane on Runway 20L, but he instead landed on a parallel taxiway. An American Airlines flight was on the same taxiway, waiting to take off.

A video released last month showed Ford's Aviat Husky plane from behind as it descends toward the airfield where the American Airlines Boeing 737 is slowly taxiing.

Harrison Ford's mistaken flyover at airport0:36

'Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?'

"Was that airliner meant to be underneath me?" Ford asked the air traffic control tower as he landed in the wrong spot. "Oh. I landed on Taxiway Charlie. I understand now. Sorry for that," Ford said.

In a phone call with an air traffic controller after the incident, Ford said he "got distracted by the airliner" and also mentioned "big turbulence" from another plane that was landing.

The American Airlines flight, with 110 passengers and six crew members, departed safely for Dallas a few minutes later.

When an air traffic controller told the Star Wars and Indiana Jones star to take his time getting the number from his pilot's license, remarking it isn't a big deal, Ford responded: "It's a big deal for me."

After Ford told the employee his name, the man seemed taken aback and assured Ford he won't share his phone number with anyone.

Investigation ongoing

Landing on a taxiway, instead of a runway, is a violation of Federal Aviation Administration regulations. The agency's probe of the incident is still underway, spokesman Ian Gregor said Friday.

Ford's publicist did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday afternoon.

Ford, who collects vintage planes, has a long record as an aviator. He has had several close calls and a serious accident in March 2015 when he was injured in his World War II-era trainer. It crashed on a Los Angeles golf course after engine failure.

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Harrison Ford says he was 'distracted' when he flew over plane last month

This Mississauga boxer is a champ - at film festivals

Daniel Hayes has three things on his to-do list — to become a Hollywood actor, an elite athlete and an Olympic boxer.

His journey to get there is the focus of The Honey Badger, a short film that has amassed dozens of accolades, including the award for Best Documentary Short at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival Awards. The film has its Canadian premiere Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at Toronto's Scotiabank Theatre as part of the Canadian Film Fest.

The film's title comes from the nickname the 28-year-old from Mississauga has earned in the ring. The honey badger is an animal noted for its fearlessness.

Daniel Hayes

Daniel Hayes spoke with CBC's Gill Deacon on Here and Now Friday. (CBC)

"It's definitely something that will constantly test your will time and time again," Hayes said about the sport in an interview with CBC's Here And Now. "I believe we're all really — when you break us down to the bare bones — very primal, so I love the combat aspect to the sport. That's why I do it."

After missing the 2016 Olympic Games because of a shoulder injury, Hayes is now preparing to qualify for the 2020 Games in Tokyo. The documentary follows the boxer as he prepares for his first professional fight in Mexico, now that the International Olympic Committee has allowed pro boxers to compete..

The documentary is directed by his longtime friend Kamar Burke — also known as KB Kutz.

Kamar Burke KB Kutz

The Honey Badger is KB Kutz's first film. (CBC)

"I kind of just followed [Hayes] around," Burke said. "He's just an animated guy, he's just so hungry, so it was easy to get all those good shots."

Burke said he's been amazed with the response his film is getting — especially considering it's his first one.

Check out the trailer for the film below.

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This Mississauga boxer is a champ - at film festivals

Sesame Street puppeteer hopes new Muppet with autism will help kids understand each other

vendredi 24 mars 2017

Friday March 24, 2017

Big Bird and his Sesame Street pals have a new friend.

Her name is Julia, and she's the first character in the show's history who has autism.

Stacey Gordon is the puppeteer and voice behind the four-year-old Muppet with bright red hair, bangs, mustard-yellow skin and a pink outfit. She spoke with As It Happens host Carol Off about what Julia brings to the show. Here is part of their conversation.

CO: What do you think children will understand about Julia from watching her as a character?

SG: My hope is that kids will understand some autistic behaviours a little bit better and they won't be at all concerned or worried about them, that they won't be scared of them, that they'll see a child in their own community who might behave like Julia, or have some of the characteristics that Julia has, and they'll see that as just another kid.

And they'll be able to go up to that child and go, "Oh! That kid might be a little bit like Julia, and Abby [another Sesame Street character] plays with Julia and I can play with this kid too."

CO: You've said elsewhere that playing the role of Julia is a good fit for you. Why is that?

SG: I've been in the autism community for probably 16 or 17 years. I used to be a habilitator for kids on the spectrum and the cause had always been close to my heart. And then when I left that job, I had a child who was later diagnosed as on the spectrum as well. It's definitely very important to me.

CO: And what did you learn from having your own child who is on the autism spectrum?

SG: Being an autism parent is a round-the-clock-job. When your child goes to school, you're still on call. I think that knowing what my kid goes through helps me bring a better sense of understanding and authenticity to what I can give to Julia.

CO: What can children take from this episode when it comes to playing with the person in their own class who has autism?

SG: I think that, if anything else, I hope that the kids who watch this episode who are neurotypical, really just understand that the kids who might behave like Julia are just like they are and they might just do things in their own special way.

So in the episode we have Julia and Elmo and Abby all painting. And Elmo and Abby are using their fingers to finger-paint. But Julia doesn't like the feeling of paint in her fingers so she's using a brush. She's doing the same things that they're doing, just in her own Julia way.

Sesame Workshop-Autism

Julia, centre, is close friends with with Abby Cadabby, left, and Elmo. (Marybeth Nelson/Associated Press)

CO: How does Julia get along with the other characters of Sesame Street?

SG: We've established that she has a strong connection with Abby and Elmo. She always has a grown-up around that she can turn to if she gets overwhelmed, but she plays with Abby and Elmo and Big Bird and other characters in later episodes, too.

I think that what I really love about seeing Julia progress throughout the season is that we stop calling attention to her autism and we see her as a regular kid.

TV-Sesame Street-Autism

This image released by Sesame Workshop shows Julia, a new autistic Muppet character debuting on the 47th Season of "Sesame Street," on April 10, 2017, on both PBS and HBO. (Zach Hyman/Sesame Workshop/Associated Press)

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Sesame Street puppeteer hopes new Muppet with autism will help kids understand each other

How moving to Canada helped Amy Jo Johnson, the first Pink Power Ranger, reinvent her career

For a young Amy Jo Johnson, Hollywood fame was more daunting than the evil monsters she regularly fought on television.

Shortly after moving to Los Angeles in the early 1990s at the age of 21, the young actor was cast in a new kids' show.

It was called Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers and it became an instant hit.

Johnson, who played Kimberly Hart, the Pink Ranger, describes herself as having been "an insecure, naive young girl" at the time, totally unprepared for what would come.

In early 1994, the Rangers made their first live appearance, performing acrobatic stunts and answering fan questions at Universal Studios in Los Angeles. They filled the 4,000-seat amphitheatre four times over. More than 35,000 people flocked to the park, far more than organizers anticipated.

Merchandise stands were mobbed. The freeway was backed up for miles. It was nearly too much for Johnson to handle.

"It was a live show, so we had to, like, stand on top of a huge 20-foot tower and pull off our helmets, and the entire audience started to scream like we were rock stars," she recalled.

"I went home that night and had horrible nightmares — horrible nightmares. It just threw me for a loop," she said. "I realized, in that moment, that I don't want to be famous. I don't want to be a superstar with huge fame. I think it is a strange thing to have people that you don't know, know you."

It was a rude awakening for a young actor in her first role, but Johnson turned it into a launching pad for a fulfilling career — never far away from that pink spandex uniform, but neither held back by it.

And while it made her think twice about staying in the show business, it ultimately led to more varied and rewarding work.

And it was aided in part by her exodus to Canada.

'Ridiculously low' pay for Rangers

Stage fright wasn't the only tough part of the job for Johnson in those early days. Stories of low pay and workplace harassment have trickled out over the years as former Rangers have spoken out in interviews and at fan events.

AJJ Power Rangers

Amy Jo Johnson made her acting debut as the Pink Power Ranger in the early 1990s. (Saban Entertainment)

"It was a non-union show," said Johnson. "At the time, being 21 years old, it was more money than I had ever made, but we were paid a ridiculously low amount of money by industry standards."

Multiple Rangers were replaced after demanding higher wages. David Yost, the Blue Ranger, who later came out as gay, said he quit the show after enduring homophobic slurs from the crew.

In a guest column for Variety this week, Johnson wrote that in addition to being paid "peanuts," she "almost died a few times because of the makeshift low-budget stunts we performed."

Canada 'feels like home'

Johnson left the series in 1995 after appearing in over 120 episodes, and arguably went on to the most successful acting career of anyone in the original squad. She landed a recurring role in Felicity, and counts E.R. and Spin City among her other television and film appearances.

In 2005, she left Hollywood behind and moved to Canada to reevaluate her career.

"I just needed a break from L.A., and from the industry," she said. "I extricated myself, and my entire life, to Montreal, wanting to take a break and look at if I even wanted to act anymore."

Amy Jo Johnson The Space Between

Amy Jo Johnson on the set of her feature film, The Space Between. (Mark Essner)

It wouldn't be long before the cameras called again. She went on to co-star in the Toronto-based police drama Flashpoint for five seasons, earning a Gemini award nomination along the way.

"When Flashpoint carried me to Toronto, I really fell in love with Canada. Like, as soon as I got to Toronto, I was like, OK, I can make this place my home. This feels like home," she recalled.

She's been a Torontonian for the last eight years and received her Canadian passport in 2015, making her a dual Canadian-American citizen.

Transition into filmmaking, directing

Getting away from the pressures of Hollywood also allowed her to explore a creative side beyond acting.

She has released three folk-rock albums and directed and produced two short films. Her first feature film, The Space Between, is set to launch this summer.

Despite the rocky start, Johnson doesn't consider her legacy as a Ranger to be a burden on her career.

"Without even knowing it at the time, a way to inspire thousands of little girls to believe that they can be as badass as little boys. That, in itself, is priceless," she wrote in her Variety column.

At a press junket for the new film, she surprised the cast — including Naomi Scott, who plays the new Kimberly — by appearing as a reporter for an interview.

AJJ meets the new rangers

They spoke about bridging the gap between generations of Power Rangers fans. In fact, devotees of the show have been a major force in supporting Johnson's more recent work.

In 2014, she donned a Pink Ranger costume and busked in Toronto's Yonge-Dundas Square to promote her Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign for The Space Between. The campaign was a success. (Additional funding came from Telefilm.)

"It was all those kids that are now grown up that watched Power Rangers that helped fund my movie," said Johnson. "So I feel really very lucky and blessed to have that as my first job as an actor."

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How moving to Canada helped Amy Jo Johnson, the first Pink Power Ranger, reinvent her career

No changes to The Last Jedi because of Carrie Fisher's death, says Disney CEO

Disney CEO Bob Iger says the upcoming Star Wars sequel has not been changed due to the death of Carrie Fisher.

Fisher completed filming her role as Princess Leia/General Organa in The Last Jedi before her death following a heart attack in December.

Fisher "appears throughout" the film and her performance "remains as it was," Iger said in an interview at a University of Southern California tech conference Thursday. 

A digitized portrayal of Fisher, who speaks just a single word, concluded the one-off film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.

He added that Disney is discussing "what could be another decade and a half of Star Wars stories."

Iger's remark came on the same day Disney ended speculation that he would retire this year by extending his contract one year to 2019. He says he and Disney's board thought they needed more time to work on a succession plan.

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No changes to The Last Jedi because of Carrie Fisher's death, says Disney CEO

'No one should be making money off a black dead body:' White artist's Emmett Till painting sparks protest

An abstract painting of lynching victim Emmett Till on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York was the subject of a weeklong protest by a black artist who decried the canvas as "an injustice to the black community" because it was painted by a white woman.

Parker Bright spent several days this week standing in front of the painting by Dana Schutz, who used historic photographs as inspiration for her depiction of Till, a 14-year-old black Chicago boy killed by white men in Mississippi in 1955.

Till's mother insisted on an open-casket funeral to show the world the mutilated body of her son, and Jet magazine published photos of his corpse. The brutality sparked outrage that helped galvanize the civil rights movement.

EMMETT TILL

Mamie Till Mobley is seen weeping at her son's funeral in Chicago in Sept. 1955. She insisted on an open-casket to show the world the brutally mutilated body of her son and Jet magazine published photos of his corpse. Artist Dana Schutz created her controversial painting based on historic photographs. (Chicago Sun-Times/Associated Press)

In an interview published Thursday in Artnet News, Schutz said that when she made the painting last year, it was a response to "a summer that felt like a state of emergency."

"There were constant mass shootings, racist rallies filled with hate speech, and an escalating number of camera-phone videos of innocent black men being shot by police," she said.

"The photograph of Emmett Till felt analogous to the time: what was hidden was now revealed."

Facing criticism, curators defend 'unsettling image'

Bright, who engaged onlookers in conversations about Open Casket, argued in a Facebook Live video that "Schutz doesn't have the privilege to speak for the black people as a whole or for Emmett Till's family."

"No one should be making money off a black dead body," he said, demanding that the curators remove the painting from the biennial exhibition.

Bright's protest found supporters online. A Berlin-based British artist, Hannah Black, sent the biennial curators a letter lambasting Schutz for using "black pain as raw material." She called on the museum to destroy the painting.

Emmett Till

Emmett Till's grave marker is seen in Alsip, The woman at the centre of the trial of Till's alleged killers, who were acquitted of his death, has acknowledged that she falsely testified that the teen had made physical and verbal threats, according to a historian's recently released book. (Robert A. Davis/Associated Press)

Whitney curators Mia Locks and Christopher Y. Lew, both Asian American, defended their inclusion of Schutz's "unsettling image" in the show.

"By exhibiting the painting we wanted to acknowledge the importance of this extremely consequential and solemn image in American and African American history."

Locks said any attempt to shut down a conversation about art "is a dangerous and slippery slope and feels to me like an affront to the belief in art and the capacity of art to hold all those complexities."

Scott Rothkopf, the Whitney museum's chief curator, said the museum took pains to publicly acknowledge the controversy.

Effort to 'engage with the loss,' says artist

Schutz, who didn't respond to interview requests from The Associated Press, said in a statement provided by the museum that Open Casket was an effort to "engage with the loss."

"I don't know what it is like to be black in America. But I do know what it is like to be a mother. Emmett was Mamie Till's only son. I thought about the possibility of painting it only after listening to interviews with her," she wrote.

She dismissed accusations of trying to profit from Till's killing, pledging that the painting "was never for sale and never will be."

The controversy was the subject of false news reports. Several websites circulated a bogus letter purporting to be from Schutz calling for the painting to be removed.

'Artists can do what they want. That has to be the case. But then people will respond to it however they will respond to it.'- Robyn Autry, sociology professor

Whitney patron Robyn Autry, an African-American professor of sociology who came to see the painting from Connecticut, said viewing it was painful because of the subject material, but "artists can do what they want. That has to be the case. But then people will respond to it however they will respond to it."

Elias Schultz, a 20-year-old student from New York, said it's important to let everyone be heard.

"I don't think that Schutz is doing any harm by bringing more attention to the story of Emmett Till," she said.

The 2017 Whitney biennial exhibition is on view until June 11. It features the work of 63 individuals and collectives, about half of whom are female artists and about half are non-white.

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'No one should be making money off a black dead body:' White artist's Emmett Till painting sparks protest

Boston drummer Sib Hashian dies; The Rock pays tribute to him as '2nd dad'

John (Sib) Hashian, former drummer for the arena rock band Boston, died on board a cruise ship Wednesday. He was 67.

His son, Adam Hashian, said Thursday a cause of death had not yet been determined.

Hashian was listed as one of the featured performers on the Legends of Rock Cruise, which departed from Miami on Saturday and was scheduled to visit Puerto Rico and the Bahamas.

Hashian played on Boston's first two hit records, their self-titled debut album in 1976, featuring the hit song More Than a Feeling, and the 1978 followup, Don't Look Back.

The original band, made up of founder Tom Scholz, Brad Delp, Barry Goudreau, Fran Sheehan and Hashian, had one of the most successful debut records in history, selling over 17 million copies, with the singles Long Time and Peace of Mind.

Delp committed suicide in 2007.

His wife, Suzanne Hashian, said in a statement that arrangements would be made at a later date.

Hashian's daughter, Lauren, has been in a relationship with Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson for several years, prompting him to pay tribute on social media.

"What a full and exciting life this man lived," said Johnson. "What an amazing family he created, loved, watched over and protected."

"Thank you for the many life lessons you've taught over the years," he added.

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Boston drummer Sib Hashian dies; The Rock pays tribute to him as '2nd dad'

'Qapla'!': Timmins, Ont. Klingons raise their flag at city hall to celebrate 50th anniversary

jeudi 23 mars 2017

There's a flag flying in front of the city hall in Timmins, Ont. — but it's not one that usually adorns municipal buildings.

On earth.

The raising of the Klingon Empire flag in northern Ontario this week doesn't mean the battle-hungry alien race of warriors, made popular in the Star Trek television franchise, has conquered the region.

The demonstration, and the proclamation from the mayor that March 23 is Klingon Empire Day in Timmins, is to celebrate 50 years of Klingons on-screen.

The Star Trek Original Series episode Errand of Mercy was first broadcast on March 23, 1967, featuring Canadian actor John Colicos portraying Commander Kor.

John Colicos

Canadian actor John Colicos portrayed Commander Kor in the original Star Trek series. March 23, 1967 marked the first appearance of a Klingon on-screen. (Crimson Dawn / Facebook)

Klingons are 'honest people'

This week's events were organized by a Star Trek fan group in Timmins called Crimson Dawn.

The group is also a chapter of an international fan organization called the Klingon Assault Group.

There are many reasons to honour the alien race, said Crimson Dawn group member Karen Hutchinson, also known by her Klingon title of "Lieutenant TlharnoQ."

"Klingons are very honest people, very passionate people. They are very straight-to-the-point and are very concerned with honour as a society," Hutchinson said.

Hutchinson said she watched her first episode of Star Trek when she was three years old.

"Like many young people, I thought the bad guys were cool," she said. "In the original series, Klingons were the bad guys."

"Since then, they have [become] a proud warrior race that is not evil but works with the federation [and] can still provide conflict and opposition," Hutchinson said.

Klingon 2

Karen Hutchinson, also known as Lieutenant TlharnoQ, poses with members of the Timmins Klingon fan club Crimson Dawn. (Crimson Dawn / Facebook)

'Iconic' alien race

Representatives from Crimson Dawn joined Timmins Mayor Steve Black for the proclamation and flag raising on Monday.

"The flag flies over city hall today to recognize 50 Years of Klingon culture and development as a mirror for humanity, as well as the contributions of Klingon fans to their communities over the years," read part of a statement posted Thursday on the group's Facebook page.

"[Klingons] would serve as the foundation of what would become one of the most iconic alien races, not only in Star Trek, but all of science fiction," the group wrote.

Klingons in Timmins

The flag of the Klingon Empire is seen flying at city hall in Timmins, Ont. to mark 50 years of the fictional alien race on-screen. (Crimson Dawn / Facebook)

Click here to listen to Karen Hutchinson speak to CBC's afternoon radio show Up North about Klingon Empire Day in Timmins.

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'Qapla'!': Timmins, Ont. Klingons raise their flag at city hall to celebrate 50th anniversary