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Even The Diabetes Drug Company Has 'Suspended' Paula Deen

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Paula Deen

You know it's bad when even Diabetes drug company Novo Nordisk has chosen to suspend ties with Paula Deen following her recent racism scandal.

On Thursday, the pharmaceutical company announced, “Novo Nordisk and Paula Deen have mutually agreed to suspend our patient education activities for now, while she takes time to focus her attention where it is needed.”

The statement continued, “Novo Nordisk would like to acknowledge Paula’s involvement in our Diabetes in a New Light™ campaign, where she has helped make many people aware of type 2 diabetes and the lifestyle changes needed to control this serious disease.”

Deen's involvement with the drug company was controversial in itself because the butter-loving Southern chef only admitted she had Diabetes a full three years after her diagnosis -- time that she could have spent promoting a lifestyle far healthier than the fried foods she promotes.

Add it to the long list of companies that have dropped Deen as their spokeswoman.

Last week, the Food Network dropped their star TV chef and the nation's largest pork distributor Smithfield Foods soon followed suit.

On Wednesday, Wal-Mart announced they will no longer work with Deen as did the company behind Caesars casinos, which are home to four of her restaurants.

Your move, QVC.

SEE ALSO: Paula Deen's 4 Casino Restaurants To Close After Being Dropped By Caesars

SEE ALSO: Wal-Mart Drops Paula Deen

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Vin Diesel Teases He May Star In A Marvel Movie

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How do you ensure "The Avengers 2" makes even more money at the box office than "The Avengers"? 

Sign on "Fast & Furious" star Vin Diesel whose latest sequel in the  has earned $647 million at the box office worldwide.  

Last night, the actor hinted to his more than 43 million followers on Facebook that he may soon be in talks to appear in an upcoming Marvel film. 

"P.s. Marvel has requested a meeting... no idea what for... haha, you probably know better than me…" 

vin diesel facebook

Earlier this month, Disney announced dates for two untitled Marvel films scheduled for May 6, 2016 and May 5, 2017.  

Robert Downey Jr. just signed on for two more "Avengers" films as well. 

With Comic-Con just around the corner in July it would be an optimal time to reveal those mystery projects. And what better way to do that with one of this summer's biggest stars? 

Fans responding on Diesel's Facebook page have already started discussing roles they'd love to see him cast in ranging from Cage to Black Panther.

Collider speculates he could be Thanos, a powerful titan who is rumored to be the main villain in the next series of Marvel films leading up to "The Avengers 2." 

Don't get too excited yet. It's just a meeting request and the actor's pretty busy with two movies out next year including "Fast & Furious 7."  

Diesel's very transparent with his fans on the social media network so if you're looking for any updates, his Facebook is the first place to go. 

SEE ALSO: The Rock's demi-god diet for his next role in Hercules

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Now Target Is Cutting Ties With Paula Deen

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Paula Deen

Target is the latest retailer to cut ties with celebrity chef Paula Deen following her alleged use of racist language. 

The retailer told CNBC it was phasing out her merchandise in stores and online. 

Wal-Mart also announced yesterday it wouldn't be ordering any more of Deen's merchandise going forward. 

Target currently sells an array of Deen-branded cookware. 

Since Deen was accused of using racial slurs, she's lost a slew of contracts.

The Food Network dropped the star, as did Caesars Palace and Smithfield Foods. 

SEE ALSO: The Most Scandalous Moments Of Paula Deen's Career

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Kristen Bell Proposes to Dax Shepard On Twitter After DOMA Decision

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Kristen Bell Dax Shepard

Kristen Bell popped the question to long-time boyfriend Dax Shepard on Wednesday following the Supreme Court's ruling on the Defense of Marriage Act.

The couple, who have been technically engaged since 2010, very publicly decided to wait to get married until same-sex couples could.

It all unfolded on Twitter.

The proposal:

The answer:

And the celebration begins:

Bell, who will star in the Kickstarter-funded film adaptation of "Veronica Mars," and "Parenthood" actor Shepard defended their reasoning during a CNN interview last year. It wasn't a PR stunt, they said.

"We're not going to have a party and invite our friends, half of whom can't do that thing we're doing. We're not going to ask them to come celebrate a right they don't have," Shepard said. "That's just tacky!"

“I don't believe in standing in the way of love, and I want to stand up for that right," Bell said.

Watch the clip:

The adorable re-engagement comes as no surprise from the pair, who tweeted their first child's birth announcement in March of this year. 

And Bell's appearance on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" in 2012 already proved they're the perfect couple. If you're one of the 16 million who haven't seen Bell's sloth meltdown on YouTube, watch below.

SEE ALSO: Celebrities Freak Out About Gay Marriage Victories On Twitter

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Here's What Martha Stewart Has To Say About Paula Deen's Downfall

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Martha Stewart

Martha Stewart is no stranger to public scandal.

So what does the once disgraced domestic diva think about Paula Deen's recent racism controversy and subsequent fallout?

"I feel sorry for Paula Deen," Stewart told Bravo's Andy Cohen while appearing on Wednesday night's "Watch What Happens Live!" "She's a public figure. And I know you have to be extremely careful being a public figure."

Asked whether she "agreed" with the public and corporate reaction to Deen's admitted past use of the N-word, Stewart responded, "I don't want to say whether I agree or not. I just feel you have to really watch yourself especially especially in this day and age, with cameras all over you and google."

She added knowingly, "What I just said ... It'll be there forever."

While both Stewart and Deen have had shows on the Food Network, Stewart had "no comment" on Deen's firing.

But if anyone can give Deen, 66, hope, it's 71-year-old Martha Stewart.

After serving five months in prison related to her involvement in an insider trading scandal, Stewart has since successfully relaunched her TV, magazine and book publishing empire.

Watch Stewart's full interview ith Andy Cohen below: 

SEE ALSO: The most scandalous moments of Paula Deen's career

SEE ALSO: Even The Diabetes Drug Company Has Now Dropped Paula Deen

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Gwyneth Paltrow Has Sex-Addicted Boyfriend In First 'Thanks For Sharing' Trailer

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gwyneth paltow thanks for sharing

Gwyneth Paltrow is walking around in skimpy black lingerie, Mark Ruffalo is her sex-addicted boyfriend, and Pink — the singer — is talking about sausage fests.

That basically sums up the first trailer for "Thanks for Sharing" about recovering sex addict Adam (Ruffalo) who is trying to start a relationship with Phoebe (Paltrow). 

The dramedy from Stuart Blumberg ("The Kids Are All Right") premiered to favorable reviews during last year's Toronto International Film Festival.

While watching the trailer we couldn't help but wonder how Iron Man's Tony Stark would feel if he knew girlfriend Pepper Potts was getting down and dirty with his pal Bruce Banner.

"Thanks for Sharing" opens in theaters September 20.

Check out the trailer below:

SEE ALSO: Jimmy Kimmel re-enacted how he got a black eye using a male model to play himself

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Here Are The Companies That Aren't Afraid To Show Support For Paula Deen

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Paula Deen

With the Food NetworkWal-mart, and even Diabetes drug company Novo Nordisk severing ties Paula Deen, major brand partnerships look dire for the shamed celebrity chef.

But just because Deen's cookbooks are being thrown in the clearance bins at local Duane Reades doesn't mean that every company is jumping on the drop-Deen bandwagon.

In spite of accusations of racism and using the N-word, Deen still has some (albeit smaller) corporate sponsors that are vocally showing their support.

Local food company Sandridge Foods voiced its "unwavering support."

The soup, salad, and fresh produce maker out of Medina, Ohio tweeted Paula Deen's infamous "I  is what I is and I'm not changing" Today Show quote to its 207 followers as a sign of its "proud' support of Deen.

“Paula is a very caring person who has spent the majority of her life helping the less privileged and giving back,” said Sandridge. “As an organization, we believe she and her team are on the right track and we look forward to continuing to work together.”

CEO Mark D. Sandridge believes she has proven "her genuine equality for all."



Springer Mountain Farms, which has been raising chickens for over 40 years, is nearing 7,000 likes in just one day for its post supporting Paula Deen.



Tasty Blend Foods was "very pleased" with her interview on The Today Show and "very saddened" that she was being judged for her past.

Tasty Blend Foods is a dry mix manufacturer for retail and foodservice products. It also appears to have a very religious foundation and posts bible quotes regularly on its Facebook page. (See right.)

The company released the statement Wednesday that:

"Tasty Blend Foods was very pleased with the Paula Deen interview given this morning on the Today Show. We appreciate her commitment and how she stepped up and apologized to her viewers, fans and the nation. We personally endorse Paula Deen and what she stands for. We are very saddened that she is being judged by her past, everyone has made a mistake sometime in their lives. We look forward to our continued partnership with her."



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It's The 30-Year Anniversary Of The Greatest Wall Street Movie Ever Made: Here's The Story Behind It

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trading places

In June of 1983, “Trading Places” was released in theaters. It remains the greatest Wall Street movie ever made.

Thirty years later, most regard it as part of the canon of American comedies, having launched, revived, or defined the careers of many of its cast and crew.

If you haven’t seen it yet, you should probably repent to your local pastor, then log into your nearest Netflix account.

But as a courtesy, we’ll summarize the plot: Two septuagenarian brothers who run a successful commodities brokerage in Philadelphia get into an argument about whether a person’s character is shaped by nature or nurture. They decide to make a bet: They will frame a top executive (Dan Aykroyd) with drug possession and soliciting a prostitute (Jamie Lee Curtis). Meanwhile, they will promote a street beggar (Eddie Murphy) to the executive’s former role. They will then observe whether the beggar and executive still act like their old selves.

To celebrate the 30-year anniversary of this film, we reached out to some key principals behind the film — sadly, many are no longer with us, though their collective experience at the time of the shooting helped make the movie as good as it was — to talk to us about how it got made and what it means today.

ORIGINS

JOHN LANDIS, director: I got a call from Jeff Katzenberg, the executive at Paramount at that time, asking if I would read a script called ‘Black And White,’ which I thought was a lousy title — ironically black or white was something I did with Michael Jackson several years later.

It was very old fashioned, a social comedy very much like the screwball stuff done in the '30s. Hollywood made a series of movies — Preston Sturges, Frank Capra — these comedies that really were about society at the time, and were fairly political, but wonderfully funny and with strong characters.

TIM HARRIS, co-writer: There were these two brothers who were both doctors who I would play tennis with on a fairly regular basis, and they were incredibly irritating to play with because they had a major sibling rivalry going, all the time about everything.

There were these two brothers who were both doctors who I would play tennis with on a fairly regular basis, and they were incredibly irritating to play with because they had a major sibling rivalry going, all the time about everything. — Tim Harris, co-writer

So they always had to be separated, you know, play on the other team.

And they were very wealthy but also incredibly cheap — we would play on public courts where it was like a couple of bucks for four guys for an hour.

And they’d have arguments about who was coming up with 50 cents, and I think one very hot day I played with them, and I just came home and was fed up with it, and I just thought, ‘God, I just don’t want to play with these people, they’re awful.’

And I had the idea of them betting on a nature/nurture situation with somebody in their company, and I’d pretty much worked out the whole thing, and went over to Herschel’s and told it to him and he thought it was fabulous.

At the time I was living in what was a fairly run-down part of L.A. near Fairfax Avenue that was completely crime ridden. I lived in an apartment complex where everybody either had a gun held to their head or been raped or whatever — just a very criminal environment — that was part of it I suppose as well.

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HERSCHEL WEINGROD, co-writer: The truth is that the only way that a screenplay can really be judged, by definition, isn't on the page, it's by watching the film that was made from it. It can certainly be read and enjoyed, but the inescapable fact is that it was written in order to be seen.

THE CAST

LANDIS: The script was developed for Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. And when I was sent the script, Richard Pryor, unfortunately, had his accident where he burnt himself rather badly, and they sent it to me and said, ‘What do you think?’

‘48 Hours’ hadn't come out yet, but they’d previewed it, and Eddie Murphy had previewed very well, and they thought, ‘Ah this kid's going to be a star,’ So they said, ‘What do you think about Eddie Murphy playing the Billy Ray Valentine part?’ And I of course said, ‘Who’s Eddie Murphy?’

So they said, ‘What do you think about Eddie Murphy playing the Billy Ray Valentine part?’ And I of course said, ‘Who’s Eddie Murphy?’ — John Landis, director

Because I didn’t watch Saturday Night Live since John [Belushi] had died.

So I read the script, and I saw Eddie's tapes, and went to New York and met with Eddie. And they wanted — I won't tell you who they wanted me to cast — but the studio was very unhappy with almost everybody they wanted me to cast.

John Belushi had died, and [Dan Aykroyd’s] movie without John was called ‘Dr. Detroit,’ which was a failure, so conventional wisdom was that Aykroyd without Belushi was like Abbott without Costello, and that his career was over.

Now I knew Danny well, having worked with him, and I knew Danny was a fine actor, and he could easily play this guy. Danny, he's an actor: You tell him what you want, and he delivers. And I thought he'd be wonderful. So he reduced his price quite a bit, and I got him, so I had Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy, and they were upset because Danny hadn't — his last couple of pictures hadn't done well, and Eddie was still an unknown really. ‘48 Hours’ came out while we were shooting...

trading places

The only character in the script I had a problem with, because she's such a fantasy, is Ophelia. The classic ‘hooker with a heart of gold’  — she's such a fantasy that I thought how the fuck am I going to get away with this?’ I had met Jamie Lee Curtis — I shot a documentary on horror stuff, and she was host of it — she was a ‘scream queen.’ And I met her and she was so funny and smart and sexy, and I thought, ‘Oh she'd be terrific.’  

She had just made ‘Halloween 2,’ for which she'd been paid I think a $1 million, and we paid her probably $70,000. When I cast her the studio went nuts. I was called into the head of the studio’s office and he said, ‘This woman's a B-movie actress,’ and I said, ‘Not after this movie!’ But boy they really didn't like the fact that I cast Danny and Jamie.

JAMIE LEE CURTIS, ‘Ophelia’: I had made a conscious effort to actually stop doing [horror movies]. I knew that that would not allow me a full career — that at a certain point it would get limiting. And I met John when he was doing a short — a documentary about horror movie trailers from the '50s called ‘Coming Soon.’ He needed somebody to narrate, so he hired me for that; that's when I first met him. And during the course of that, he must have had some sense that I would be good. So he handed me that part.

He clearly went against every one of the studios. The casting people all thought he was crazy, and he single-handedly changed the course of my life by giving me that part.

trading places

He single-handedly changed the course of my life by giving me that part. — Jamie Lee Curtis

HARRIS: The casting is very much to John’s credit, he just cast the movie brilliantly, and all the minor parts really shine. It’s actually one of those movies, where it changes a lot of the participants’ careers forever. It got Jamie Lee Curtis out of horror movies. It got Herschel and I to a much more prominent level. The two old guys — it completely revived their careers. It catapulted everybody’s careers in a positive way.

LANDIS: The most remarkable story, casting wise: I thought, ‘Well, I need someone who was a movie star in the ‘40s, who never has never really played a villain, and I was thinking, ‘Hey, what about Don Ameche?’ And the casting woman said, ‘Don Ameche’s dead.’ And I said, ‘I don't think so, I would know if Don Ameche is dead.’

And so we called the Screen Actor’s Guild, and his residuals were being sent to his son in Phoenix, Arizona. And I thought, ‘Well that's not a good sign.’ And he didn't have an agent, and I thought, ‘Shit, goddamm, who else could we get?’ when one of the  secretaries said, ‘I heard you're looking for Don Ameche.’ We said ‘Ya.’ She said, ‘I see him all the time walking on San Vicente in Santa Monica.’

trading places

So I called information, and I said, ‘I there a Don or D Ameche on San Vicente in Santa Monica?’ And there was! So I called him. And you know he has that unmistakable voice, and you realize, Don was a huge star, in the late ’30s, definitely a big star in the ’40s — I mean he was Alexander Graham Bell for chrissakes! — a major star in the ’50s, Broadway star, radio star, movie star, television star.

And I said, ‘Mr. Ameche?’ ‘Yeeessss...?’ ‘My name is John Landis, I’m with Paramount Studios, and I'm making a film and I’d like you to consider a part.’ So I had a script sent over. ‘And could you please read this and can you come in tomorrow?’ And he said, ‘Yes.’ Would you like us to send a car?’ He said, ‘No no, I can drive.’ I said, ‘Great.’

And he came in and was prepared to read for me. I was so shocked. I said ‘You don't have to read for me.’

He hadn't made a movie in 14 years, he'd been doing dinner theater.

While we were shooting later in Philadelphia — he was so wonderful — I said, ‘Don, may I ask a question? How come you haven't worked in 14 years?’ And he said, ‘Well, nobody called!’

The great upshot of this is after Trading Places came out, the next movie he was in was ‘Cocoon,’  which he won an Oscar for. He never stopped working the rest of his life — he made like 10 more movies — I worked with him twice more.

ON LOCATION

HARRIS: [Philadelphia] has a connection with the founding of the country, the constitution, everybody being entitled to the pursuit of happiness, all the idealism that’s built into America. I thought it was a good way to highlight that, especially in the opening scene when you see the legless black guy.

trading places

LANDIS: A lot of the interiors that are supposed to be in Philadelphia are actually New York. The exterior and interior of Duke Brothers, the big floor, was Philadelphia. But the offices were upstairs at the Park Avenue Armory, they had these beautiful Stanford White interiors. In fact, there was a real Gilbert Stewart portrait of George Washington — I said ‘Can I use that?’

[The Heritage Club location] was an amazing find. It's an old Chamber of Commerce building, it was empty — a spectacular room, we just put the table in there.

SCAMMING THE SCAMMERS

LANDIS: It took me a long time just to understand the con, what was going on. It's just so funny, it's so long ago now, the chicanery is so much more arcane now. At least in ‘Trading Places,’ at the end of the day, there was the commodity.

HARRIS: I asked some people who were in that business to kind of walk me me through it, and when I was writing it — it was like studying for an exam, you know, you kind of understand it the day of, and then 24 hours later you can’t remember how anything works.

trading places

LANDIS: It was actually in the script that the final scenes were in Chicago at the commodities exchange, but they would not let us shoot there. We really had tried every which way to get permission to shoot there, and I think truthfully once they saw we had a clear understanding of how it worked, it was like, ‘No!’

So we ended up at the commodities exchange in New York which was at the World Trade Center at the time.

About 90% [of the floor traders in the movie] were actual traders, and a great deal of it I shot during actual trading hours. They were into it — if anything they were less rough. I was quite taken aback at how physically rough it was — they really elbowed one another ... It was like a contact sport.

I was quite taken aback at how physically rough it was. It was like a contact sport. — John Landis

They were basically trading like 8 or 9 hours a day, so we were in there for 3 to 4 hours on two days between opening and closing, and we got a lot done. I actually shot some ‘guerrilla’ stuff there that I used in the movie.

I also remember that the commodities market, it was in one of the towers at the World Trade Center on the 50th or 60th floor — no windows, and 3 to 4 stories high. That was very strange, to take an elevator up 50 or 60 floors, and then you thought you were underground.

AN INSTANT CLASSIC?

WEINGROD: The film got extremely good reviews from the major film critics at the time - Vincent Canby at the New York Times; Siskel & Ebert, both on their TV show and in the Chicago Sun-Times; Richard Schicikel in Time Magazine; Sheila Benson in the L.A. Times; even People magazine. There were some negative reviews as well, but we were hopeful that the good ones would help audiences go and see the film. They did and, fortunately, they liked it a lot. I just looked it up, and it was the fourth highest grossing film in a year where ‘Return Of The Jedi’ and ‘Tootsie’ were first and second.

HARRIS: It didn’t have a huge opening, but it just kept going and going and going.  I had a call from an agent saying he was getting calls asking if it was true that the whole film had actually been the producer Aaron Russo’s idea, and that he’d just paid us to write it. Then I got another call saying Jeffrey Katzenberg at Paramount was going around saying it had all been his idea. Being by then already a Hollywood cynic, I knew it was a hit, because people were trying to steal credit for it already.

CURTIS: Some people will pretend they knew it. Paramount maybe felt like it had something. In the middle of the process, you never anticipate that it’s going to be off the charts. ... It's just a really funny movie. ‘Motherfucker? Moi?’

WEINGROD: If you write an original screenplay that becomes a commercial and critical success, you suddenly have a certain amount of legitimacy. No one's risking their job hiring you to do a writing assignment or even making another of your original scripts because you've already made money for a studio; you're in the club, as it were. ... Hiring writers whose films have been successful helps mitigate this essential absurdity of the screenwriting process for the buyer.

LANDIS: Movies have a life of their own.

AN “INSPIRATIONAL” FILM

HARRIS: It was probably just on the cusp of it becoming incredibly trendy to be absolutely rich. We played into that at the end of film: Tdream is achieved because these two guys, a black guy and white guy, both got filthy rich. I think that’s why the film is successful — it’s a satire on greed and social conventions, but it had a satisfying happy ending. They both got what they wanted.

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CURTIS: Old money still has the power — nothing has changed. It’s shocking to me, but it’s not surprising. It’s shocking that you would think people would be held accountable, but I just don't think that's reality today.

LANDIS: The sheer enormity of the dishonesty that's rampant in the banking industry and securities business ... This all extends from deregulation — just the cowardice and corruption of the Senate, it's just ... you can't exaggerate this stuff. You really can't.

HARRIS: Somebody came up to me recently and said it was because of ‘Trading Places’ that he’d gone into the world of finance, which is like a huge paradigm turn — that a film written as satire of that world ends up inspiring somebody to go into that world and make a lot of money. But it just shows how times change since that film was made.

WEINGROD: Bernard Madoff, former chairman of NASDAQ, had been investigated by the SEC since 1999, but the scandal didn't break until 2008. 'Nuff said.

WHITHER WALL STREET COMEDIES?

HARRIS: The movies that have come out about Wall Street, none of them are funny. They’re all melodramas, they take themselves very seriously. I think they’re constrained, they have to be automatically liberal in their disapproval of it.

I was sort of disappointed with that. ‘Trading Places’ is a sort of backward-looking film, that owed more to the films of the ’40s and ’50s than it does to anything that was going on at the time it was made.

‘Brewster’s Millions’ was a social comedy about money and greed and what it does to people, but after that, there were no films like that being made anymore.

There were no films like that being made anymore. — Tim Harris

Comedies were being directed at a specific groups of kids — teenagers — and that seemed to take over a great deal. 

I think it’s probably an American thing — they’re not interested in looking at that stuff particularly. I don’t think Hollywood is either — it’s awkward for them. The important people in Hollywood are really, really, filthy rich. They don’t want to see that made fun of particularly, I don’t think.

CURTIS: Comedy is all about character and conflict. There’s certainly enough conflict in banking, and there are certainly enough characters. Someone who's clever could come up with a good hook.

trading places

SEE ALSO: The Most Important Charts In The World

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There's A Scene In 'Man Of Steel' Where Superman Looks Exactly Like Christopher Reeve

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christopher reeve supermanWhile new Superman flick "Man of Steel" has been getting some flak for portraying a more "brooding" version of the Last Son of Krypton than his 1978 counterpart, it seems the film may have a subtle tribute to Christopher Reeve hidden in plain sight.

Reddit sleuth TareXmd noticed that in the first scene where Superman takes flight, you can see Henry Cavill's face morph into what appears to be Christopher Reeves for an instant.

It's not clear if this was intentionally done in CGI or if this is simply a case of "seeing Jesus's face in toast" as another Reddit user put it.

Check out a GIF of the scene below:

man of steel gif
The frames in question are the first ...

man of steel christopher reeve
... and right before the end.

man of steel christopher reeve christopher reeve man of steel
Here's another image of Christopher Reeve to compare.

superman christopher reeve

More Superman: Tour the filming locations of the film

SEE ALSO: 'Man of Steel' is already getting a sequel

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Beyoncé's Dad Sues Rupert Murdoch's Tabloid For Claiming They're Estranged

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beyonce Matthew Knowles

Matthew Knowles, father and former manager of music superstar Beyonce Knowles, has filed suit against the Sun, claiming that Rupert Murdoch's British tabloid made "malicious and false statements" in an article about him.

The suit claims that Knowles consented to an interview with reporter Georgina Dickinson on the condition that he would not "discuss personal family topics, only his career and the career of his artists, and music or business topics." Dickinson promised that her article would "paint a well-rounded picture of Mr. Knowles, both as a loving family man and force to be reckoned with in the music world."

However, according to the suit, the story published in the Sun contains multiple falsehoods, including the claim that Knowles had suffered a "bitter rift with his famous daughter — admitting he is devastated at being pushed out of her life."

Knowles' suit states that the article also claims that he "has reportedly not yet met [his granddaughter] Blue Ivy," despite photographic evidence to the contrary.

TheWrap has reached out to Murdoch's News Corporation for comment.

Knowles' suit claims that, when he confronted Dickinson about the assertions in the article, she could "only apologize that someone in London, not me" changed the story, and sent him the story as she submitted to the paper.

The difference between the filed story and the published story, the suit claims, "is stark."

On top of it all, the complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in Texas on Tuesday, claims that Knowles was promised payment for the interview in exchange for pass on future interviews with U.K. publishers, but "the promised payment, however, was never made."

Alleging defamation and breach of contract, Knowles is seeking unspecified damages.

Pamela Chelin contributed to this report.

SEE ALSO: Forbes' Most Powerful List Is Dominated By Women

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All Of James Gandolfini's 'Sopranos' Co-Stars Attended His NYC Funeral This Morning [PHOTOS]

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After dying unexpectedly of a heart attack in Rome June 19, actor James Gandolfini was laid to rest today at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine on Manhattan's Upper West Side.

The triple-Emmy winner was remembered by his wife Deborah Lin Gandolfini, his two children and countless past co-stars.

And "The Sopranos" cast was out in full force to pay their respects to the boss.

The media camped out in front of the church early to get a glimpse of James Gandolfini's famous friends.

James Gandolfini funeral church press

David Chase, the creator and executive producer of "The Sopranos" gave a eulogy in a form of a letter to Gandolfini, saying, “You were a good boy… a sad boy, amazed and confused. You could see it in your eyes. That’s why you were a great actor.”

Chase recalled the star once saying to him, “You know what I want to be? A man. That’s all. I want to be a man.”

Below is Chase entering the church.

David Chase James Gandolfini funeral

Gandolfini's on-screen wife in "The Sopranos," Edie Falco," sought comfort in friends before the 90-minute service.

Edie Falco James Gandolfini funeral

Gandolfini's on-screen "Sopranos" daughter Jamie Lynn Sigler, who just announced she is pregnant with her first child, was already tearing up before the service.

 Jamie Lynn-Sigler James Gandolfini funeral

She was vey emotional.

 Jamie Lynn-Sigler James Gandolfini funeral

Lorraine Bracco played Tony Soprano's therapist Dr. Jennifer Melfi for six seasons on the hit HBO show.

Lorraine Bracco James Gandolfini funeral

She found support in fellow co-star Michael Imperioli, who played Christopher Moltisanti.

Michael Imperioli Lorraine Bracco James Gandolfini funeral

Steve Schirripa played Bobby 'Bacala' Baccalieri.

Steve Schirripa James Gandolfini funeral

Joe Pantoliano played Ralph Cifaretto for 22 episodes.

Joe Pantoliano James Gandolfini funeral

 Aida Turturro played Tony Soprano's wild sister, Janice. She also played James Gandolfini's daughter in "Romance & Cigarettes."Aida Turturro James Gandolfini funeral

Her real life cousin, John Turturro, directed the two in "Romance & Cigarettes."

John Turturro James Gandolfini funeral

Alec Baldwin was there. The two actors co-starred in 1996's "The Juror."

Alec Baldwin James Gandolfini funeral

Celebrity chef Mario Batali made a surprise appearance.

Mario Batali James Gandolfini funeral

Even New Jersey Governor Chris Christie came out to pay his respects.

Chris Christie James Gandolfini funeral

SEE ALSO: Celebrities Tweet Funny And Heartfelt Condolences About James Gandolfini

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Cameron Diaz Cast As The Villain In Jay-Z And Will Smith's 'Annie'

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cameron diaz

Cameron Diaz is going to be the sexiest Miss Hannigan ever.

Yes, after Sandra Bullock passed, Nikki Finke of Deadline reports that Diaz is taking over the key villain role in the Jay-Z and Will Smith produced adaptation of the 1977 musical Annie. So this movie is shaping up to have a starry, kind of bizarre cast. 

Diaz is certainly an interesting choice for a role that has been played by the likes of Dorothy Loudon, Carol Burnett, Kathy Bates, and, currently on Broadway, Jane Lynch. Productions have oscillated between casting Miss Hannigan as a washed-up sexpot and, well, a Kathy Bates type. In her big number Little Girls, Hannigan sings: "I'm an ordinary woman / With feelings / I'd like a man to nibble on my ear / But I'll admit no man has bit / So how come I'm the mother of the year?"  

Diaz does sexpot well, just in a way that's perhaps more overt than any Miss Hannigan before her. But there may be something to the casting, which Finke called an "inspired choice"—the role is perhaps an ancestor of her Bad Teacher character

But can she sing? Miss Hannigan requires a big belt, which in some cases can be faked, but Diaz's most famous musical number involves a particularly bad bit of karaoke in My Best Friend's Wedding; her voice was dubbed for The Mask. Meanwhile, we've got youngest ever Oscar nominee for Best Actress, Quvenzhané Wallis, in the lead role, Jamie Foxx playing a man who will apparently not be called Daddy Warbucks, and a new Miss Hannigan in the form of Cameron Diaz, whose singing may not end up being as important as how she rounds out this cast and what it means for this potentially bizarre and/or awesome adaptation of a classic.

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More from The Atlantic Wire:

Nobody Likes Paula Deen

Sarah Palin May Be Your 'Hunger Games' President

Armie Hammer Doesn't Need A Twitter Account To Be A Movie Star

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Channing Tatum Got Pretty Goofy At The After Party For His New Film 'White House Down'

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Channing Tatum's new movie "White House Down" is out this Friday.

The film follows John Cale (Tatum) who heads to the White House for an interview and instead gets caught up saving the president (Jamie Foxx) during a hostage crisis. 

The stars of the film have been attending premieres in both New York and Washington D.C. 

After the New York City screening, the stars headed over to the Frick museum where Tatum hammed it up for the camera alongside on-screen daughter played by Joey King and executive producer Reid Carolin.

The photos are priceless.

channing tatum white house down after party

channing tatum joey king white house down

channing tatum white house down

white house down channing tatum

This is by far the best.

channing tatum white house movie

Here's one of the trio without the hijinks.

channing tatum white house down

NOW: Watch a trailer for the film

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10 Huge Breakthroughs That Came From All-Nighters

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Getting enough sleep is important, but don't be afraid to work through the night when necessary.

Eric Epstein's new book, 24 Hours Genius: Unlocking Your Brain's Potential with Strategic All-Nighterschronicles some memorable stories of how successful people pulled all-nighters that led to some amazing breakthroughs. 

Epstein argues that the all-nighter, done properly, is a great way to unlock creativity and get past barriers.

These are some historic examples of insomniacs at their best:

"Microsoft: A Company Founded on All-Nighters"

bill gates microsoft excelPaul Allen and Bill Gates bluffed their way into an opportunity and pulled multiple all-nighters to reach success. According to Epstein, the two pitched to the Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems company (MITS) some computer program that didn't really exist. When the company bought the BS, Allen and Gates had only one month to create the code and submit it to the company. They worked in Harvard's Aiken Computation Lab almost non-stop until their work was completed. 

Source: Eric Epstein

"Woodward and Bernstein: The Watergate Investigation"

WatergateBob Woodward and Carl Bernstein stayed up nights doing research and writing articles while uncovering the Nixon Watergate Scandal. The pair conducted secret meetings with sources like "Deep Throat" in order to break the story before other journalists and before the president's administration could take any preventative action.

Source: Eric Epstein

"Steve Wozniak: The Invention of Color Computer Monitors"

steve wozniak hugging steve jobs

Wozniak and Jobs created the first personal computers to feature color graphics in 1976, but the feat was not easily accomplished. The duo describe the difficulties in staying up for days on end, though their motivation to succeed propelled them to overcome the exhaustion and transcend their benchmarks.

Wozniak said in Kenneth Brown's book, Inventors at Work

"'Sometimes I wanted a code to be so perfect before I released it that I put in whole sections of code that were not even planned for the program and that nobody would even notice—so that it would be good and right.When something inside motivates you like that, you don't even notice time. You can go without sleep and not even sleep the next day.'"

Source: Eric Epstein

"The Beatles: 'A Hard Day's Night'"

The BeatlesAccording to Epstein, sudden spurs of creativity are often unleashed during an all-nighter, as seen by The Beatles' Grammy-winning single "A Hard Day's Night." While the song's title wasn't initially the inspiration for the piece, it ended up sticking when John Lennon reportedly wrote the lyrics as part of an all-nighter.

Source: Eric Epstein

"Sylvester Stallone: Rocky"

rockyStallone and his wife wrote the script to the first "Rocky" movie in three and a half days, reportedly working day-in and day-out as Stallone wrote and wife, Sasha, typed. Stallone's work wasn't deadline-motivated but instead motivated by the intrinsic drive to produce something great.

Stallone describes the process in The Official Rocky Scrapbook

"There was heat. I knew that the time was now and that the quicker I got it out, the quicker it was going to be sold."

Source: Eric Epstein

"Charles Lindbergh: 'The Spirit of St. Louis'"

Charles LindberghCharles Lindbergh, first person to fly alone from New York to Paris, autobiographically documented his travels. While Lindbergh's book wasn't written during an all-nighter, his flight was completed in one, amounting to 33+ hours without sleep. Despite hallucinations, Lindbergh forced himself to think of sleep as nothing more than what he called "a trivial thing." 

Source: Eric Epstein

"Tom Stemberg: The Founding of Staples"

Staples48 hours without sleep is anything but a comfortable thought, but Staples cofounder Tom Stemberg and his team of dedicated employees embarked on the sleepless journey in preparation for the first Staples opening day in 1986. Staples is now a multibillion-dollar Fortune 500. 

Source: Eric Epstein

"All-Nighters at 'Saturday Night Live'" 

snl sequester ymcaThe writers of SNL notoriously choose the Tuesday night each week before their skits are due to stay up late so that they are forced to write efficiently and without distractions, a practice that has helped to build the show's off-camera culture.

Source: Eric Epstein

"Exploring Mars"

Mars RoverNASA scientists adapted their earthly sleep schedules to those of Mars when launching two exploratory rovers in 2004. Because the day-night cycle on Mars is longer in duration than that of Earth, team members were pulling multiple all-nighters to manage and facilitate the rovers' activity. One of the rovers operated until 2010, while the other is still on Mars today.

Source: Eric Epstein

 

Excerpts from The 24-Hour Genius by Eric Epstein by arrangement with Intermix, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., Copyright (c) 2013 by Eric Epstein

24 Hour Genius Book

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'Breaking Bad' Episode Inspired Gruesome Murder In Tub Of Acid

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breaking bad jesse

A Washington man accused of killing his girlfriend was reportedly inspired by an episode of popular television series "Breaking Bad."

KTVB reported 27-year-old Jason Hart has been accused of strangling Regan Jolley and subsequently attempting to dispose of her body in a plastic tub full of acid. 

Her naked body was later found in the tub by Hart's roommate, Dean Settle, in the garage. 

The scene described is straight out of an episode of hit AMC series "Breaking Bad." 

The second episode of the series, "Cat's in the Bag," shows character Jesse (Aaron Paul) disposing of a body in a ceramic bathtub and filling it with acid. This was after he ignored orders from main character Walt (Bryan Cranston) to rid of the body in a plastic tub. (This is why.)  

KTVB reported an episode of the series with a "similar murder plot" was later discovered in Hart's DVD player by investigators. 

Settle later told police the show was Hart's favorite. 

“That's what he told me," said Settle. "I think he used it as instructions to go do what he was doing to dispose the body.”  

Hart was charged with second degree murder to which he plead not guilty 

Local station KHQ reported he was still married to a woman named Jessica Hart with whom he has two children at the time of the alleged murder. 

He had reportedly been dating Jolley for a few weeks. 

She told KHQ Hart is a disabled military veteran who suffered from PTSD after serving time in Iraq. 

According to her, Hart was struggling with drug use which would make him become "a completely different person." 

Hart's trial is currently set for August 12. 

The final eight episodes of "Breaking Bad" premiere a day earlier, August 11 on AMC. 

More "Breaking Bad": Check out the first official poster for the new season

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Justin Bieber Fans Punked By Jimmy Kimmel, Defend Fake Stories About The Singer

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Jimmy Kimmel rolled out the latest installment of his popular man-on-the-street segment "Lie Witness News" Wednesday night and proved just how loyal Justin Bieber fans really are.

Kimmel's correspondent made up funny, fake news stories about the singer and Beliebers had his back -- even when he allegedly punched his grandmother, peed on the American flag and bought tires made of baby seals.

Watch the funny segment below:

SEE ALSO: Jimmy Kimmel Re-Enacts How He Got A Black Eye, Using A Male Model To Play Himself

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'Sopranos' Creator David Chase Gave A Perfectly Bittersweet Eulogy At James Gandolfini's Funeral

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David Chase Gandolfini Funeral

Hitfix’s Alan Sepinwall provided the transcript to The Sopranos creator’s eulogy of James Gandolfini today at the actor’s NYC funeral attended by castmates Edie Falco, Lorraine Bracco, Steve Buscemi and Jamie-Lynn Sigler as well as the show’s executive producer Brad Grey. Gandolfini died Wednesday of a heart attack in Italy.

Dear Jimmy,
Your family asked me to speak at your service, and I am so honored and touched. I’m also really scared, and I say that because you of all people will understand this. I’d like to run away and call in four days from now from the beauty parlor. I want to do a good job, because I love you, and because you always did a good job.

I think the deal is I’m supposed to speak about the actor/artist’s work part of your life. Others will have spoken beautifully and magnificently about the other beautiful and magnificent parts of you: father, brother, friend. I guess what I was told is I’m also supposed to speak for your castmates whom you loved, for your crew that you loved so much, for the people at HBO, and Journey. I hope I can speak for all of them today and for you.

I asked around, and experts told me to start with a joke and a funny anecdote. “Ha ha ha.” But as you yourself so often said, I’m not feelin’ it. I’m too sad and full of despair. I’m writing to you partly because I would like to have had your advice. Because I remember how you did speeches. I saw you do a lot of them at awards shows and stuff, and invariably you would scratch two or three thoughts on a sheet of paper and put it in your pocket, and then not really refer to it. And consequently, a lot of your speeches didn’t make sense. I think that could happen in here, except in your case, it didn’t matter that it didn’t make sense, because the feeling was real. The feeling was real. The feeling was real. I can’t say that enough.

I tried to write a traditional eulogy, but it came out like bad TV. So I’m writing you this letter, and now I’m reading that letter in front of you. But it is being done to and for an audience, so I’ll give the funny opening a try. I hope that it’s funny; it is to me and it is to you.

And that is, one day toward the end of the show — maybe season 4 or season 5 — we were on the set shooting a scene with Stevie Van Zandt, and I think the set-up was that Tony had received news of the death of someone, and it was inconvenient for him. And it said, “Tony opens the refrigerator door, closes it and he starts to speak.” And the cameras rolled, and you opened the refrigerator door, and you slammed it really hard — you slammed it hard enough that it came open again. And so then you slammed it again, then it came open again. You kept slamming it and slamming it and slamming it and slamming it and went apeshit on that refrigerator.

And the funny part for me is I remember Steven Van Zandt — because the cameras are going, we have to play this whole scene with a refrigerator door opening — I remember Steven Van Zandt standing there with his lip out, trying to figure out, “Well, what should I do? First, as Silvio, because he just ruined my refrigerator. And also as Steven the actor, because we’re now going to play a scene with the refrigerator door open; people don’t do that.” And I remember him going over there and trying to tinker with the door and fix it, and it didn’t work. And so we finally had to call cut, and we had to fix the refrigerator door, and it never really worked, because the gaffer tape showed on the refrigerator, and it was a problem all day long. And I remember you saying, “Ah, this role, this role, the places it takes me to, the things I have to do, it’s so dark.” And I remember telling you, “Did I tell you to destroy the refrigerator? Did it say anywhere in the script, ‘Tony destroys a refrigerator’? It says ‘Tony angrily shuts the refrigerator door.’ That’s what it says. You destroyed the fridge.”

Another memory of you that comes to mind is from very early on — might have been the pilot, I don’t know. We were shooting in that really hot and humid summer New Jersey heat. And I looked over, and you were sitting in an aluminum beach chair, with your slacks rolled up to your knees, in black socks and black shoes, and a wet handkerchief on your head. And I remember looking over there and going, “Well, that’s really not a cool look.” But I was filled with love, and I knew then that I was in the right place. I said, “Wow, I haven’t seen that done since my father used to do it, and my Italian uncles use to do it, and my Italian grandfather used to do it.” And they were laborers in the same hot sun in New Jersey. They were stone masons, and your father worked with concrete. I don’t know what it is with Italians and cement. And I was so proud of our heritage — it made me so proud of our heritage to see you do that.

When I said before that you were my brother, this has a lot to do with that: Italian-American, Italian worker, builder, that Jersey thing — whatever that means — the same social class. I really feel that, though I’m older than you, and always felt, that we are brothers. And it was really based on that day. I was filled with so much love for everything we were doing and about to embark on.

I also feel you’re my brother in that we have different tastes, but there are things we both love, which was family, work, people in all their imperfection, food, alcohol, talking, rage, and a desire to bring the whole structure crashing down. We amused each other.

The image of my uncles and father reminded me of something that happened between us one time. Because these guys were such men — your father and these men from Italy. And you were going through a crisis of faith about yourself and acting, a lot of things, were very upset. I went to meet you on the banks of the Hudson River, and you told me, you said, “You know what I want to be? I want to be a man. That’s all. I want to be a man.” Now, this is so odd, because you are such a man. You’re a man in many ways many males, including myself, wish they could be a man.

The paradox about you as a man is that I always felt personally, that with you, I was seeing a young boy. A boy about Michael’s age right now. ‘Cause you were very boyish. And about the age when humankind, and life on the planet are really opening up and putting on a show, really revealing themselves in all their beautiful and horrible glory. And I saw you as a boy — as a sad boy, amazed and confused and loving and amazed by all that. And that was all in your eyes. And that was why, I think, you were a great actor: because of that boy who was inside. He was a child reacting. Of course you were intelligent, but it was a child reacting, and your reactions were often childish. And by that, I mean they were pre-school, they were pre-manners, they were pre-intellect. They were just simple emotions, straight and pure. And I think your talent is that you can take in the immensity of humankind and the universe, and shine it out to the rest of us like a huge bright light. And I believe that only a pure soul, like a child, can do that really well. And that was you.

Now to talk about a third guy between us, there was you and me and this third guy. People always say, “Tony Soprano. Why did we love him so much when he was such a prick?” And my theory was, they saw the little boy. They felt and they loved the little boy, and they sensed his love and hurt. And you brought all of that to it. You were a good boy. Your work with the Wounded Warriors was just one example of this. And I’m going to say something because I know that you’d want me to say it in public: that no one should forget Tony Sirico’s efforts with you in this. He was there with you all the way, and in fact you said to me just recently, “It’s more Tony than me.” And I know you, and I know you would want me to turn the spotlight on him, or you wouldn’t be satisfied. So I’ve done that.

So Tony Soprano never changed, people say. He got darker. I don’t know how they can misunderstand that. He tried and he tried and he tried. And you tried and you tried, more than most of us, and harder than most of us, and sometimes you tried too hard. That refrigerator is one example. Sometimes, your efforts were at cost to you and others, but you tried. And I’m thinking about the fact of how nice you were to strangers on the street, fans, photographers. You would be patient, loving and personal, and then finally you would just do too much, and then you would snap. And that’s of course what everybody read about, was the snapping.

I was asked to talk about the work part, and so I’ll talk about the show we used to do and how we used to do it. You know, everybody knows that we always ended an episode with a song. That was kind of like me and the writers letting the real geniuses do the heavy lifting: Bruce, and Mick and Keith, and Howling Wolf and a bunch of them. So if this was an episode, it would end with a song. And the song, as far as I’m concerned, would be Joan Osborne’s “(What If God Was) One Of Us?” And the set-up for this — we never did this, and you never even heard this — is that Tony was somehow lost in the Meadowlands. He didn’t have his car, and his wallet, and his car keys. I forget how he got there — there was some kind of a scrape — but he had nothing in his pocket but some change. He didn’t have his guys with him, he didn’t have his gun. And so mob boss Tony Soprano had to be one of the working stiffs, getting in line for the bus. And the way we were going to film it, he was going to get on the bus, and the lyric that would’ve one over that would’ve been — and we don’t have Joan Osborne to sing it:

If God had a face
what would it look like?
And would you want to see
if seeing meant you had to believe?
And yeah, yeah, God is great.
Yeah, yeah, God is good.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

So Tony would get on the bus, and he would sit there, and the bus would pull out in this big billow of diesel smoke. And then the key lyric would come on, and it was

What if God was one of us?
Just a slob like one of us?
Just a stranger on the bus
trying to make his way home.

And that would’ve been playing over your face, Jimmy. But then — and this is where it gets kind of strange — now I would have to update, because of the events of the last week. And I would let the song play further, and the lyrics would be

Just trying to make his way home
Like a holy rollin’ stone
Back up to Heaven all alone
Nobody callin’ on the phone
‘Cept for the Pope, maybe, in Rome.

Love,
David

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Paula Deen's Books Are Selling Like Hotcakes On Amazon Amid Scandal

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Amazon best sellers

Paula Deen's various endorsement and merchandise deals might be in trouble, but her book sales are skyrocketing on Amazon.com, and Random House still plans to publish her new book due out this fall.

Deen's new book, "Paula Deen's New Testament: 250 Recipes, All Lightened Up,"was No. 1 on Amazon on Thursday morning, and her "Southern Cooking Bible" was No. 13 on the bestseller list. Some of her books were out of stock.

The "New Testament" book ranked in the 1,500s on Monday, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Soon, her books and restaurants might be her primary source of income.

So far, the Food Network, Walmart, Smithfield Foods, the company behind Caesars Palace, and the Novo Nordisk drug company have either dropped or suspended their relationship with Deen.

SEE ALSO: The most scandalous moments of Paula Deen's career

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Actor James Woods Debuts His 20-Year-Old Girlfriend At 'White House Down' Premiere

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James Woods, 66, had people talking when he was dating 26-year-old Ashley Madison.

But the actor outdid himself Tuesday night at the "White House Down" premiere in New York City, where he showed off his new 20-year-old girlfriend, Kristen Bauguess.

Bauguess made headlines a few weeks ago when she was arrested in Georgia on suspicion of two felonies: possession of marijuana and possession of a controlled substance.

Here's the new couple walking hand-in-hand down the red carpet in color-coordinated outfits at this week's premiere of Woods' latest film.

James Woods young girlfriend

Woods and Bauguess, who are 46 years apart, are also not shy about their relationship on Twitter.

In May, he posted a photo of the two at a poker tournament.

And this photo from Paradise, Nevada earlier this month.

“Love you the mostest!!! :)” Bauguess tweeted and Woods responded, “Love you more.”

Woods broke up with his last girlfriend, 26-year-old Ashley Madison, after seven years of dating.

"We've gone our separate ways but I will always love her," he confirmed to The National Enquirer in April.

As for the negative press the couple received, Woods said "Ashley was young and I was old and everyone wanted to dump on her. She was put through a lot of unfair stuff because of our relationship, but through it all, Ashley showed tremendous character."

The former pair started dating when Ashley was just 19-years-old.

James Woods Ashley Madison

Here's the couple at the Emmy Awards before their split. 

James Woods Ashley Madison

Kristen better be careful because as soon as she turns the ripe old age of 25, it looks like she may be over the hill for James.

SEE ALSO: Channing Tatum Got Pretty Goofy At The After Party For His New Film 'White House Down'

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Critics Are Tearing Channing Tatum's New 'White House' Movie Down

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channing tatum jamie foxx white house down

Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx's new movie "White House Down" comes to theaters Friday.  

The film is going head-to-head this weekend with Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy's cop comedy "The Heat." 

Currently, funny woman McCarthy's film is receiving good overall reviews on film site Rotten Tomatoes with a fresh 66%.

Tatum's drama meanwhile is getting torn to shreds by critics at a lowly 49%. 

We've heard the familiar plot before.  

1600 Pennsylvania Ave. is taken siege by terrorists while Tatum's character John Cale is there for a secret service interview. Soon Cale finds himself in charge of saving the president (Jamie Foxx), the White House, and his daughter (Joey King).  

The film comes across as a mirror image of March release "Olympus Has Fallen" starring Gerard Butler saving the president (this time Morgan Freeman) his palace — something that didn't go unnoticed by critics. 

white house down channing tatum jamie foxxHere's what some of the harshest critics are saying about the latest White House film.  

Richard Roeper gave the film an "F" after viciously calling it a lesser version of "Olympus Has Fallen." 

“Everyone in “White House Down” is an idiot, clinically insane, a cliché, or a vehicle for shameless exploitation.”

Time Out's Keith Uhlich isn't a fan of the CGI.

"It doesn’t help that all the action scenes, as with many modern Hollywood blockbusters, are seemingly edited with a Cuisinart, or that the copious CGI would barely pass muster in one of those Asylum DTV quickies. Cheap, shoddy, dull, instantly forgettable—this is the America, and American cinema, we know all too well."

Many just tore it apart for sheer ridiculousness.

Rolling Stone:

"Foxx doesn't look remotely presidential, and phones in what is laughably being called a performance. Worse is the shameless product placement ... White House Down, rated PG-13 but as crass and cynical as a Michael Bay movie, is a depressing experience."

WSJ:

"'White House Down' is solidly within its genre. In a deeper sense, though, it bespeaks a fatigue that's hard to distinguish from brain death."

Associated Press:

"If stripped of its production value, ''White House Down'' would make one hysterical off-Broadway one-act."

We guess AP hasn't seen Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx's latest musical duet

All of the reviews aren't bad, with the New York Times calling it entertaining and Variety referring to it as "a sturdy, old-fashioned bit of escapism" conjuring memories of John McClane in "Die Hard." 

white house down channing tatumEven the poor reviews admit Tatum proves himself as an action star in a less-than stellar film. 

Overall, the "White House Down" falls into the "Fast & Furious" franchise category of don't take the film too seriously, and you'll probably end up enjoying it.

Similar poor ratings didn't hurt the film's twin back in March.  

Like "White House Down," "Olympus Has Fallen" currently sits at 47% on RT, yet it opened to $30 million opening weekend and it went on to make an earnest $161 million worldwide. 

The BIG difference with Butler's film is that its estimated production budget was $70 million. Sony's Tatum and Foxx production is worth more than double that cost at $150 million. 

Translation: A $30 million opening at the box office wouldn't cut it. 

BUT Tatum has a lot of star power going into this film.  

He came off a massive box office year in 2012 with "21 Jump Street," "Magic Mike," and dramedy "The Vow." Combined, the films earned more than $560 million worldwide. 

All three films debuted to more than $36 million at the box office. 

"G.I. Joe: Retaliation" was even pushed back to this year to insert Tatum into a larger role after the success of his earlier films. "Retaliation" originally killed off his character early into the film. 

Currently, "White House Down" is projected to earn $35 million opening weekend, according to boxoffice.com.

SEE ALSO: Channing Tatum got pretty goofy at the after party for "White House Down"

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