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This 10-Year-Old Is Earning $20,000 Per Episode To Star In Steven Spielberg's New TV Show

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the whispers

Kylie Rogers is just 10-years-old, but the pint-sized actress is already earning a big paycheck to appear on the new Steven Spielberg-produced ABC sci-fi drama, "The Whispers."

For the show's pilot and first 21 days of work, Rogers raked in $20,000, reports TMZ.

Since the show was picked up for series, Rogers will now earn a whopping $20,000 per episode for season one. 

No word on how many episodes will be in season one, but Rogers will make even more if the show gets picked up for a second season, according to her contract.

TMZ was able to obtain a copy of Rogers' contract because it has to be filed with the courts since she is still a minor.

In comparison, 12-year-old actress Rowan Blanchard is reported to be making $10,000 per episode for the new Disney show, "Girl Meets World."

Despite her age, Rogers has many credits to her name. The 10-year-old has appeared on 17 TV shows since 2012, including NBC's "Private Practice" and ABC's "Once Upon a Time in Wonderland."

"The Whispers" — about aliens who take over Earth using children — also stars "American Horror Story" actress Lily Rabe, "Heroes" star Milo Ventimiglia, and tons of other little-known child actors.the whispers kylie rogers

"The Whispers" will premiere mid-season on ABC. Watch the super creepy trailer below:

SEE ALSO: 17-Year-Old Chloe Moretz Could Earn $550,000 For Costarring In Denzel Washington's New Movie

AND: Here Are The 24 New Shows Coming To TV This Fall

MORE: This 12-Year-Old Actress Gets A Huge Paycheck For New Disney Channel Show

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A 'Hunger Games' Star Tells Us About Life As A Student At Stanford

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Jackie Emerson, Hunger Games

Jacqueline ("Jackie") Emerson was a senior in high school when she landed her first film role, playing Foxface in "The Hunger Games." The District 5 tribute, known for her cleverness and red hair — both of which Emerson possesses in real life — made her a natural fit for the part.

Emerson had also just been accepted to her dream school: Stanford University.

Filming for the movie ended before her high school graduation, but Emerson still decided to take a gap year, something she says had been in the cards all along.

“College has always been my number one priority, more than anything,” she says, but in taking a gap year, "I feel like I came to college in a much more mature place.” Emerson, who appeared on our recent list of 15 Incredibly Impressive Students At Stanford, is now a sophomore. She spoke with Business Insider about her current projects, and adjusting to life at Stanford.

Arriving at college was a bit of a culture shock, Emerson says. She'd just spent the last year or so with twenty- and thirty-somethings, whose idea of fun was "playing charades until two in the morning." College was an entirely different animal. Not to mention that Emerson had just appeared in one of the highest-grossing movies of 2012, and some people recognized her. Luckily, she says it's never really been an issue.

Jackie Emerson, Stanford

"Over time it’s become a very comfortable environment," she says. "So many people here have done way cooler things than I’ve done. Yeah, I was in a movie ... but other people are curing cancer, and running their own companies … I feel like I’m constantly being inspired by everyone around me.”

Emerson is focusing her full attention on school right now, but her biggest outside project, which she co-founded during her gap year, is SHE'S SO BOSS, a movement to empower young women. Based on the book "She's So Boss" by Stacy Kravetz, Emerson and Glass Elevator Media CEO Adrienne Becker created a space where young women could find their voices.

The movement is made up of different, smaller branches that unpack topics like sexism, body image, leadership, and self-confidence. Through video clips and blog posts, Emerson helps ensure that SHE'S SO BOSS is informative, empowering and, most importantly, real. For that reason, she recently launched another branch called Real Talk, along with fellow actors Devin Lytle and JD Durkin. The online community will give young women a place to open up to others and feel comfortable being vulnerable.

Jackie Emerson and grandpa

A smaller side project of hers is doing voiceover work, and she just finished recording the voice of Scout, the lead character in a new Disney interactive game, "Fantasia: Music Evolved."

Emerson is majoring in Chinese, and is considering a double-major in psychology or international relations. Being fluent in Mandarin, Emerson knows she wants to continue using the language when she graduates (maybe helping to bring some of the U.S.'s more progressive views on women to China, she says), but as far as plans go, she's not 100% sure where she'll end up yet.

“I know what I love and I know what I’m passionate about and I know what I’m working on right now," she says, "but hopefully it all takes off in the sense that I’ll be able to continue to pursue it.”

SEE ALSO: 15 Incredibly Impressive Students At Stanford

FIND US ON TWITTER: Follow @BI_Lists!

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Marvel's Movie Announcement Blew Warner Bros.'s Out Of The Water

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robert downey jr thumbs up marvel event oct. 28 2014Marvel pulled out all the stops to unveil a lineup of nine new movies Tuesday in Hollywood.

Friday, the studio caused a stir when press invitations were sent out for a mysterious, secret announcement. Marvel then invited fans in Los Angeles to nab tickets for the event as well. 

If you weren't able to make it, you weren't left out. Marvel ran a live blog of the event for fans to follow. Those at the event were encouraged to use the hashtag #MarvelEvent when sharing photos and tweeting.

A Marvel team live-tweeted and blogged during the event so when "Avengers" director Joss Whedon showed up, fans knew. When Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) and Captain America (Chris Evans) took the stage with Black Panther actor Chadwick Boseman the public saw it as well.

robert downey jr marvel press event

As soon as a movie was announced images that appeared on screen in Hollywood's El Capitan Theatre simultaneously hit the web both on Twitter and on Marvel.com as the site released individual stories about each film. 

No sooner than the event was over did Marvel introduce Twitter accounts for new individual superheroes, Doctor Strange, Captain Marvel, Black Panther, and Inhumans.

doctor strange twitter

In short, Marvel crushed it.

In stark contrast, when Warner Bros. announced a lineup of 11 superhero movies, plus standalone Batman and Superman movies, earlier this month, they did it at an investors' conference.

No fanboys were in attendance. No big actors came out to surprise anyone. 

Instead, Warner Bros. bunched up its superhero movie releases with all of the studio releases ranging from "The Lego Movie" to three "Harry Potter" spinoff movies.

Soon after a press release hit the wire. 

Here's how it read:

warner bros movie press release

You wouldn't know new movies were announced unless you knew what to look for and scrolled down to the bottom for a quick list.

warner bros upcoming movies

The only photo that made its way online was a small shot from David Lieberman at Deadline that shows the entire upcoming film schedule. 

upcoming DC films

Unlike Marvel, there were no logos on display for any of the other movies. It was just standard text on blank, colored backgrounds. That's a slightly worrisome sign that gives a hint that Warner Bros. may be rushing to roll out these superhero movies as fast as possible to compete with Disney's Marvel superhero films.

Every single one of Marvel's upcoming movie title reveals was well-polished. Concept art for "Black Panther," a film that won't be out in theaters until Nov. 2017 was readily available for fans. 

black panther concept art

While Warner Bros. has an impressive, packed film schedule through 2020, the studios' nonchalant reveal shows they still don't quite grasp how to correctly unveil these films for maximum attention. 

They had an incredible wealth of news to break and they decided to deliver it all in one short news dump. Are audiences and investors even familiar with all of these characters? I may know who makes up the "Suicide Squad" but a majority of people probably don't. Marvel went through each film briefly Tuesday telling a little background on the new characters before moving on.

batman statue nycc 2014It's mind boggling because Warner Bros. had a huge opportunity to make all of this news even bigger. They easily could have unveiled it at New York Comic Con a few days earlier where many of the studios' Batman and Superman fans were celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Dark Knight.

DC Comics had various celebrations of the Caped Crusader at the Con unveiling new postage stamps and showing off an upcoming video game, "Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham." One of the original Batman actors, Adam West, was even there. It seems like a huge miss.

Marvel's announcement Tuesday came across as a mini Comic Con event. It was Disney and Marvel's answer to DC and Warner Bros. unveiling a huge film schedule. In the months and years to come, I'm sure we'll see a lot more of this back and forth between the movie studios as they continue to compete for fans' attention with comic book adaptations.

Bottomline, there are more than 30 superhero movies heading to theaters between now and 2020. Audiences are not going to want to, nor do they have the means or time to head out to every single one. Right now, Marvel comes across as the place where the party's at. Warner Bros. can roll off as many movie titles as they want, but at the end of the day, the studio may want to step up its game.

SEE ALSO: Here's "The Avengers 3" teaser traielr that made fans go wild at Marvel's press event

AND: "Captain America 3" could be a gigantic movie featuring tons of superheroes

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SNL Star Michael Che Offends With Sexist Facebook Status About Catcalling

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Michael Che

Yesterday, a video about catcalling took over the internet.

It was taken from the perspective of a woman who walked around Manhattan with a camera, and documented the times when she was catcalled, spoken to, whistled at, or commented on. 

It happened 112 times. Women on Twitter and Facebook were commiserating with the filmmaker, and many men and women were surprised that this kind of attention is unwanted, or even considered to be harassment.

The video has been viewed more than 6.5 million times.

Men including SNL star Michael Che, who took to Facebook to comment the following. He likens the catcalls to times when people come up to him on the street, recognizing him from SNL.

Michael Che

The amount of "likes" on the post is concerning, as were some of the comments from women and men below his statement.

Michael Che

He then posted to Facebook again, using a somewhat sarcastic approach.

Michael Che

You can watch the full video below:

SEE ALSO: The Director Of The Viral Catcalling Video Explains Why It Was Street Harassment

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Not Even Mike Tyson Himself Can Beat 'Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!'

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Mike Tyson's Punch-Out

Former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson was on "The Tonight Show" on Tuesday. So of course Jimmy Fallon got the boxer-turned-actor to play a Nintendo classic: "Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!" 

"I always thought it would just be an amazing thing if you played 'Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!' and tried to fight yourself," Fallon says. 

The game is notoriously hard as you go up the ranks. Even Tyson knows how hard the game can be; he's played it before

"I would be killed, man," Tyson says. "He beats everybody ... I've only met one little kid around 10 years old who said he beat me." 

It doesn't take much persuasion, however, and soon Tyson is standing in front of a giant screen, facing off against himself. 

Unfortunately, the match doesn't last long, and, like so many before, Little Mac is knocked out in a TKO. 

Watch the whole fight in the video below:

SEE ALSO: 7 of the coolest secrets in the game "Destiny," and how to find them

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HOUSE OF THE DAY: Bruce Willis Has Bought A New York Countryside Getaway For $9 Million

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Bruce Willis Bedford Home

Bruce Willis and his wife Emma Heming just bought up 14 acres of prime New York countryside real estate, according to real estate website Trulia.

Located just one hour outside of the city, their new getaway home sits on Bedford’s highest points and provides breathtaking 180-degree views of the valley and reservoir below. 

The 8,000-square-foot home has five bedrooms, six bathrooms, a swimming pool with a heated cabana, and a tennis court.

Talk about country elegance. 

Plus, Willis and his wife will have plenty of star company. Their new neighbors are Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Doguals, Martha Stewart, and Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds, Trulia reports.  

Welcome to Croton Lake Road, in Bedford New York. The massive home sits on a 14-acre property.



The gorgeous shingle-styled home blends classic and rustic elements.



The interior living space of the house has been meticulously crafted.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






Top Gear Is Going On The Ultimate Road Trip Again — And The Trailer Looks Amazing!

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Top Gear Epic Road Trip

The BBC's smash hit car show "Top Gear" just released the trailer for its annual Holiday DVD, and it's as epic as expected.

The DVD — "Top Gear Perfect Road Trip 2" — captures the show's hosts, Jeremy Clarkson and Richard Hammond, as they take an epic journey through southern Europe.

The DVD will not only be a follow-up to last year's "Top Gear Perfect Road Trip," installment 1 — it will also serve as somewhat of a do-over for the first sojourn, which did not end in an ideal manner. 

The first "Road Trip" concluded with Clarkson and Hammond on side of a damp French highway being accosted by police as the duo were issued driving bans for speeding.

As for this year's road trip, Clarkson and Hammond will once again hit the Riviera in search of fast cars and fun times.

From the looks of the trailer, they seem to have found them. 

The dynamic duo take to the streets in everything from a million-dollar McLaren P1 to a classic Alfa Romeo Giulietta Spider to '80s-chic Ford Capris. 

The all-conquering Corvette Stingray also takes on Alfa Romeo's pint-sized 4C supercar, in a contest on the track.

As with all "Top Gear" undertakings, comedy is must. Not only does Richard Hammond take a spill in a $100,000 Jaguar F-Type Coupe on what looks to be Italy's Mugello race track — he also fails to successfully order spaghetti bolognese in a restaurant!

Top Gear Perfect Road Trip 2

Missing from all of this high-speed drama is the third member of the "Top Gear" team. So where was James May while Clarkson and Hammond were road-tripping?

That mystery may be revealed later.

SEE ALSO: Consumer Reports: This Mercedes Is '140% Worse Than The Average Car'

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Google Glass Is Now Banned From All US Movie Theaters

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Google Glass.

Movie fans will no longer be able to wear Google Glass and other wearable technology in US cinemas.

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) have combined to prohibit the usage because they are afraid of illegal recording and movie privacy, according to Variety. 

Google Glass has been the center of much uncertainty since the public started experimenting with the device.

One man, a self-proclaimed "ignorant idiot," was even detained by the FBI while watching "Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit" in Columbus, Ohio, earlier this year.

The wearable's subtlety compared with smartphones, cameras, and other equipment has led to its being banned in some bars, Las Vegas (within all the city's casinos), and previously a handful of movie theaters.

Now the MPAA and NATO have released a full statement, rendering Google Glass completely off-limits when enjoying popcorn and a film.

The groups' joint policy mentions a "long history of welcoming technological advances" and recognizes "the strong consumer interest in smartphones and wearable 'intelligent' devices."

But crucially, it adds: "As part of our continued efforts to ensure movies are not recorded in theaters, however, we maintain a zero-tolerance policy toward using any recording device while movies are being shown

"As has been our long-standing policy, all phones must be silenced and other recording devices, including wearable devices, must be turned off and put away at showtime."


NOW WATCH: Movies Of The Past That Correctly Predicted The Technology We Have Today

 

 

SEE ALSO: Twitter Stops Supporting Google Glass

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Peter Jackson Explains How The Crazy Barrel Scene In 'The Hobbit' Sequel Came Together

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barrel the hobbit desolation smaug

There's a scene about an hour into "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" where hobbit Bilbo (Martin Freeman) saves a group of dwarves after they're captured and imprisoned by the Elvenking Thranduil (Lee Pace). 

Bilbo sets the dwarf clan free so they can continue on their three-movie journey to reclaim the Lonely Mountain from the dragon Smaug. The jailbreak involves the dwarves stowing away into empty wine barrels that drop out of the floor and into the water.

the hobbit barrel drophobbit barrel drop water

Ahead of the release of "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug"on Blu-Ray and DVD on Nov. 4, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment shared an exclusive clip with Business Insider on how the popular barrel scene came together. 

In the film's commentary, director Peter Jackson describes the challenge that went into putting the scene together.

"It was hard getting a head around this because in the book, they go into barrels," says Jackson. "Bilbo kind of rolls them into a room and the tops are on the barrels which makes total sense because otherwise 'How would the barrels float?' In the movie, visually, it didn't seem that exciting to have a bunch of barrels — sealed barrels."

"I think you almost visually get away with it," he added.

Check it out below.

SEE ALSO: How "The Hobbit" dragon looks without visual effects

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Early 'Interstellar' Reviews Are Much Worse Than Expected

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interstellar matthew mcconaughey

Director Christopher Nolan's "Interstellar"  starring Matthew McConaughey and Anne Hathaway on a space mission to save the future of the human race  is one of the most highly anticipated movies of the year.

The film doesn't hit theaters until Nov. 7, but the handful of lucky fans and entertainment insiders who saw the movie during a few private screenings last week all raved about it:

Even directors like Brad Bird had only praise for the project:

But the minute critics finally saw the film earlier this week, the rave reviews came to a halt. It turns out "Interstellar" may not be the Oscar-sweeping movie everyone thought it was going to be.

"'Interstellar' Lifts Off, But There's Still No Oscar Frontrunner," The Wrap writer Steve Pond titled his recent review of the flick.

Pond explains: "'Interstellar' is a big, extravagant film that will clean up when it comes to below-the-line nominations, and a touching movie that could figure into the Oscar acting races. But it isn't the one thing that this year's race has been missing: a frontrunner."

matthew mcconaughey christopher nolan

In Forbes contributor Scott Mendelson's review "'Interstellar' Gets Lost In Space," he writes that "Christopher Nolan’s ambitious outer-space adventure is more admirable for its intentions than for its overall execution."

The Guardian's Henry Barnes agrees, saying: "Christopher Nolan’s post-Batman epic gens up on the physics, gets down with the grandeur, rattles down a wormhole and gets lost in space."

In his review, Barnes writes of the film: "It wants to awe us into submission, to concede our insignificance in the face of such grand-scale art. It achieves that with ease. Yet on his way to making an epic, Nolan forgot to let us have fun."

"Interstellar" has just a 72% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, which is fairly low compared with Nolan's past films like 2010's "Inception" (86%), or 2008's "The Dark Knight" (94%).

It looks as if "Interstellar" star McConaughey, who won last year's Best Actor Oscar for "Dallas Buyer's Club," may not be bringing home that statue two years in a row.

But the negative reviews aren't hurting box office projections.

"Interstellar" is slated to rake in an estimated $76 million opening weekend, per BoxOffice.com, which also projects that the film will earn $340 million total domestically.

Despite the negative reviews, there are still a few positive posts out there, like Variety's, which says: "Christopher Nolan hopscotches across space and time in a visionary sci-fi trip that stirs the head and the heart in equal measure."


NOW WATCH: Movies Of The Past That Correctly Predicted The Technology We Have Today

 

SEE ALSO: Here's What Fans Were Saying About "Interstellar" Before Critics Got Their Hands On It

MORE: 17 Must-See Fall Movies

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'Shark Tank' Investor Daymond John Reveals What He Looks For In A Pitch

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daymond john

When fashion and marketing expert Daymond John is watching entrepreneurs pitch their products to him on ABC's hit show "Shark Tank," he's more focused on the person than the product.

"We're not investing in companies. We're investing in people," he tells Business Insider.

And the main thing he's looking for is the assurance that he's going to get a return on his investment.

"No matter what, the most important part is that you need to make the investors feel like you're going to wake up every day and bust your butt," he says.

John says that he certainly gets excited about opportunities to jump into a new industry or market, but if he doesn't like an entrepreneur, he's not going to want to work with them.

"You are going to have to potentially talk to the person on the other side of that pitch every day for the next 20 years," he says. "Can you deal with that person?"

Obviously a good personality isn't going to win an entrepreneur any money on its own, but if they've got a good product and business savvy, there are ways to increase the chance of making a good impression on the Sharks, John says.

He wants an entrepreneur who is knowledgeable about their product and industry but isn't arrogant and stubborn. "The investors may feel like, 'You know what, you're so smart, I need you, because this is something tech-based and I need you to figure it out.' Or they may feel like, 'You know what, you're so smart that I'm never going to see my money because you'll be stealing it every two minutes,'" he says.

He also looks for entrepreneurs who are energetic — but not excessively energetic, because that raises a red flag for him that the founder may be using smoke and mirrors.

And to prove to John that they can be trusted to work hard, entrepreneurs need to be honest. "Honesty means that you don't go up there and act like what you're doing is so great and that it's never had any problems. Tell me about the problems as much as you tell about the opportunities, and how you may have solved some of the problems," he says.

scrub daddyJohn tells us that his favorite pitch may be from Scrub Daddy founder Aaron Krause, a company Lori Greiner invested in, because it "was like watching an infomercial without the editing." He found Krause earnest, prepared, and likeable.

John's least favorite pitches came from Scottevest's Scott Jordan and Copa Di Vino's James Martin. He found the entrepreneurs to be obnoxious know-it-alls who were convinced they were smarter than the Sharks, an approach that investors certainly don't appreciate.

And finally, John says he gets frustrated by entrepreneurs who appear to only go on the show for the publicity, without any intention of handing over a decent portion of their company to a Shark in return for their capital and expertise.

So, if you're going to pitch to the Sharks, John says, be humble and informed. And hope that luck is on your side.

"You can't know what the other person is going to like about you. You may look like their husband's ex-girlfriend!" John says.

SEE ALSO: Daymond John Reveals What It's Like Being A 'Shark Tank' Investor

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Here's A First Look At The Futuristic Sports League Made Up Of Giant, Fighting Robots

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megabots, nycc 2014

Earlier this month, MegaBots, Inc. spoke exclusively to Business Insider about its vision for a real-life sports league made up of giant humanoid robots that fight to the death.

Three engineers believe that televised tournaments between human-piloted combat bots are the natural evolution of leagues like the WWE, UFC, and NASCAR.

This year, Andrew Stroup, Gui Cavalcanti, and Matt Oehrlein quit their jobs and began construction on the first MegaBot, a 15-foot-tall, seven-ton steel behemoth capable of firing paint-filled missiles at its opponent at 120 miles per hour. While the help of an unnamed angel investor, the team has completed a fully functioning torso, cockpit, arm, and two main weapons systems.

Today, MegaBots, Inc. launched a Kickstarter campaign to raise necessary funds to finish the first MegaBot and populate the league with additional bots. The team set a goal of $1.8 million, a rather hefty price, but not totally unexpected. "We're not building iRobots," Stroup says.

Rewards for making a contribution range from stickers and t-shirts to a hands-on experience called the "Megabot Gladiator: The Ultimate Experience." Donate $5,000 and you and a friend will fight for fame and glory as a MegaBot's pilot and gunner in the world's first tournament. 

The video on the Kickstarter campaign page packs a few fun reveals. We see the MegaBot in action for the first time. Oehrlein is seen inside the cockpit, flipping switches to power up the bot.

megabots humanoid robot

Then we see a detached main weapons system shoot paint-filled projectiles at him. The camera inside the cockpit shows that even the human pilot takes a messy beating. 

megabots humanoid robot shooting

Watch the video below to learn more about MegaBot's mission and the Kickstarter campaign

 

SEE ALSO: The Next Billion Dollar Sports League Could Be Giant Robots That Fight To The Death

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George Lucas Explains How Hollywood Became So Brainless

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In a recent interview with Charlie Rose, George Lucas opened up about how Hollywood has deteriorated.

While he created two of the biggest franchises ever in Star Wars and Indiana Jones, Lucas criticizes what he sees as a move toward brainless blockbusters and sequels. Lucas and Steven Spielberg have previously warned that this shift will lead toward an implosion if more of those big-budget movies start failing.

Talking to Rose at Chicago Ideas Week, Lucas described how things were good in the late 60s, then got worse, and how he escaped:

GEORGE LUCAS: Now the problem has always been with the studios, although at the beginning of the studios the entrepreneurs who ran the studios were sort of creative guys ... but when I grew up it was the first time they allowed film students in.

[T]he day I arrived at Warner Brothers lot for this scholarship, Jack Warner left. And then they sold it to Seven Arts which was in Canada and then another one sold to Sony and Coca-Cola, and suddenly all these corporations were coming in. They didn’t know anything about the movie business. So they said, "Maybe we should hire kids from film schools. They supposedly know how to make films." So suddenly we could get jobs which was a fantastic thing, and for two years they kind of let us do our job. ... All of my movies came in on budget and on time and they made money, and all my friends that whole gang of people made successful movies.

But then the studios went back to saying, "We don’t trust you people and we think we know how to make movies. You know, I took a script course at San Diego State and so I am going to tell you how to make these movies." ...

steven spielberg george lucas

I fortunately got through before that really happened. By the time I got "Star Wars," I said, "I’m out of here." I was still in San Francisco so I never got bugged by the L.A. industry because all the executives had to fly to San Francisco to talk to me. ... I just said "I’m going do the worst thing you can do which is to finance own movies, but then nobody can touch me." ...

[B]ut for the guys that stayed behind it became almost intolerable that the studios changed everything all the time, and unfortunately they don’t have any imagination. And they don’t have any talent. So what are you selling? So they are going to make the same movie over and over and over again. ...

And of course, in our world we were doing stuff that was all over the map. ... [T]here was a good studio executive at Fox when they did "Star Wars." He believed in me because he loved "American Graffiti." He said, "You’re a talented guy. I will do ever whatever you want to do." But you never hear that today. And he had to fight the board of directors and everything, he kept them at bay, but he said, "I don’t understand what this thing is about big dogs flying spaceships around. It doesn’t make any sense to me. Are you sure this is going to work?" And I said, "I know it’s different but I believe in it."

But you can’t do that today. You just can’t. And certain directors have gotten away with doing kind of crazy things but they are very few and far between. And you kind of wonder how they got to do, but if the studios keep doing the same cookie-cutter movie over and over and over and they cost a lot of money ...

CHARLIE ROSE: It's going to be an implosion.

star wars han solo chewbaccaGiven Lucas' opinion on Hollywood, you might wonder why he sold sell Lucasfilm to Disney for a reported $4 billion in 2012.

The Star Wars creator has previously said that he trusts the people at Disney to protect his baby rather than ruin it.

“I wanted to get into sort of another stage of life where I’m not in the film business anymore, where I don’t have to run a corporation. It occurred to me one day that the perfect person to run the company was [Lucasfilm co-chair] Kathy [Kennedy]. It’s just such a perfect fit, and I felt that I really wanted to put the company somewhere in a larger entity that would protect it. Disney is a huge corporation; they have all kinds of capabilities and facilities. There’s a lot of strength to be gained by this,” Lucas said in 2012.

He has also spoken highly of "Star Wars: Episode VII" director J.J. Abrams, saying in a 2013 statement: "I've consistently been impressed with J.J. as a filmmaker and storyteller. He's an ideal choice to direct the new Star Wars film and the legacy couldn't be in better hands."

JJ Abrams puppet, Star Wars Episode VII_edited 1As for the future, Lucas told Rose he wanted to make more "little experimental films":

GEORGE LUCAS: [M]y whole life centered around me doing these avant-garde experimental films, films that you don’t know whether they are going to work or not. You’re kind of playing with the medium which is what I wanted to do. All my student films are like that; everything I did for a long time was like that. Even THX was vaguely like that. And I'd always say, "If this fails I’m going to go back to doing my experimental films."

And all my friends, you know, Marty, Francis, Steven, and everybody say, "When are you going to do your experimental films?" I said, "Well, I got caught in this tar baby called Star Wars and lots of opportunities, lots of things, so I said 'well, I like Star Wars. I fell in love with it, and I want to complete it.'" And then after I completed it, I produced films and did things and at the same time I came back, did another, the backstory to the whole thing, and then I felt, well, at some point there are three more stories, but it takes ten years to do that — to do all three of them — and I said, "I don’t think I can do that. And I want to go do my little experimental films." ...

I said I am going to take my life and make it so I can live in Chicago, live in San Francisco, make my little art films, build a museum, take care of my daughter. I said that’s what is important to me.

thx 1138

SEE ALSO: Spielberg made millions off a 1977 with Lucas

DON'T MISS: The best Star Wars cosplay

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Seth Rogen To Play Steve Wozniak In Steve Jobs Biopic

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Seth Rogen

Comic actor Seth Rogen of "Knocked Up" fame is set to play Steve Wozniak in Aaron Sorkin's upcoming biopic of Steve Jobs, according to Variety.

Rogen will play the famous engineer and co-creator of Apple opposite Christian Bale. Sorkin, writer of "The Social Network," and "The West Wing" will pen the film. Danny Boyle, who directed "Slumdog Millionaire," is going to direct.

According to Variety, Sorkin says the movie will be based on Walter Isaacson's biography "Steve Jobs" and will be broken up into three long scenes. All of which will take place backstage before a big Apple product launch.

The next movie you'll see out starring Rogen is the controversial "The Interview" with James Franco. The premise being the two men tasked by the CIA to assasinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.

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The Intense, 4-Month Training Eddie Redmayne Went Through To Play Stephen Hawking

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The theory of everything eddie redmayne stephen hawking

Actor Eddie Redmayne landed the coveted role of famed physicist Stephen Hawking in the upcoming biopic, "The Theory of Everything."

But getting into character wasn't exactly easy for the 32-year-old "Les Misérables" and "My Week With Marilyn" actor.

Redmayne spent four months studying Hawking’s life, which he recently explained to Variety was "a process that required so much research, it was like writing a doctoral dissertation."

Since the role called for Redmayne to portray the now 72-year-old Hawking at different ages of his life and stages of his motor neurone disease, the actor watched every single documentary and YouTube video he could find on the man.

“I tried to read literally everything I could get my hands on,” Redmayne told Variety. “It became hilarious, because I would get 40 pages in, and I was like — ‘Eddie, none of these words make any sense to you.’ ” So the actor began to work with a physics teacher at Imperial College London who was able to explain things more simply.

Redmayne also worked with a choreographer, Alexandra Reynolds, for four hours a day. “We put what we knew into picking up a pen, drinking, walking, existing,” Reynolds told Variety, adding that she would film the young actor on an iPad and they would then study the footage.

Stephen Hawking

To better understand Hawking's paralyzing motor neuron disease, Redmayne visited a neurology clinic in London every two weeks, where he spoke with over 30 patients. 

Redmayne compiled his findings on a sheet of paper he carried with him everywhere during shooting. “It was like the Magna Carta,” the film’s director, James Marsh, told Variety. “It became the most important document beyond the script.

Redmayne's physical transformation became more intense when he played Hawking during the later years of his life.

The theory of everything eddie redmayne stephen hawkingMarsh said that Redmayne was "really suffering, but he never complained" when he was forced to sit in a wheelchair for hours with his legs crossed and his head tipped over, in a position that made it harder for him to breathe. 

Large prosthetic ears were used to make Redmayne appear smaller and older.

"When we wanted to get him thinner and smaller, do you know what we did?” revealed screenwriter Anthony McCarten. “You make the ears bigger and the whole body seems smaller.”

Redmayne took every detail seriously, down to his fingernails.

"I learned when he [Hawking] was 21 he decided to grow his nails as an act of defiance," Redmayne told E! Online, adding that he kept his nails long throughout filming despite "only one shot in the film where you see the nails."

Ultimately, the intense mental and physical preparations paid off for Redmayne.

After Hawking first screened the movie, he was moved to tears.

"The Theory of Everything" hits theaters November 7th. Watch the trailer below:

Read Variety's full interview with Eddie Redmayne here >

SEE ALSO: 'The Theory Of Everything' Trailer Tells The Incredible Life Story Of Stephen Hawking

MORE: Here's How Jake Gyllenhaal Lost 20 Pounds For His New Movie 'Nightcrawler'

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The Next 'Terminator' Movie Is Going To Rewrite The Franchise's History

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Next summer, we're getting our first new "Terminator" movie in six years.

Paramount is relaunching the franchise with "Terminator: Genisys," starring Jason Clarke ("Dawn of the Planet of the Apes"), Emilia Clarke ("Game of Thrones"), Matt Smith ("Doctor Who"), and the return of Arnold Schwarzenegger, who started it all.

Entertainment Weekly has a first look at the new film and it sounds like the fifth installment of the ever-ongoing war of humans versus machines will completely rewrite the origins of the first film ... somewhat.

If you've ever seen James Cameron's "The Terminator," you're familiar with the basic premise: A cyborg Terminator played by Schwarzenegger is sent back in time to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) to prevent her from giving birth to a son named John who is predicted to lead a resistance against the bots in the future.

Well, that's all about to change.

According to EW, a plot point from the film imagines Schwarzenegger's Terminator as a father figure to Sarah Connor:

"Sarah Connor isn't the innocent she was when Linda Hamilton first sported feathered hair and acid-washed jeans in the role. Nor is she Hamilton's steely zero-body-fat warrior in 'Terminator 2: Judgment Day.' Instead, the mother of humanity's messiah was orphaned by a Terminator at age 9. Since then, she's been raised by (brace yourself) Schwarzenegger's Terminator—an older T-800 she calls 'Pops'—who is programmed to guard rather than to kill. As a result, Sarah is a highly trained antisocial recluse who's great with a sniper rifle but not so skilled at the nuances of human emotion."

EW also says 'Genisys' plans to re-imagine the iconic scene from "The Terminator" when a naked Schwarzenegger lands in 1984 Los Angeles. 

terminator arnold schwarzeneggar

"To achieve that, the special effects team has created a 'synthespian,' or synthetic thespian, using a body double plus scans of Schwarzeneggar's face from the first film merged with what his face looks like now."

The film will cost a reported $170 million to make and will be directed by Alan Taylor ("Thor: The Dark World"). "Terminator: Genisys" is in theaters July 2015. 

You can read more from the EW cover feature here.

SEE ALSO: Arnold Schwarzenegger says "Terminator : Genisys" will feel a lot like "Terminator 2"

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Why 2014 Is The Best Year Ever To Be A Teenage Girl

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INTOURRingo Starr would later say he could “feel” the city as they landed, the day the Beatles came to New York, could feel the energy that came along with a frenzied reception the Fab Four had recently become accustomed to: armies of shrieking young girls.

The Beatles were among the first pop acts to tap into the roiling emotional undercurrents of what we now call the tween and teen female demo.

They weren't the last.

Fifty years later, I stood near a side entrance of the Pasadena Convention Center, as a shrill chorus of adolescent screams built into a thunderous if high-pitched roar. A glimpse of an idol, one of the dozen who had gathered that morning to spend the day performing and greeting their fans, had sparked the ruckus, and the shrieking spread like a wave at a baseball game.

“It’s Ricky!” one yelped.

“RICKY!”

Six young girls, dressed in short shorts and flannel over crop tops, a not-so-subtle nod to the 90s, a decade they were not alive during, pounded their fists against the glass window as Ricky Dillon, a Justin Bieber-type walked by and waved to the line, now hundreds of girls and parents deep. He smiled mischievously, then disappeared into a meeting room labeled press.

The crowd went wild.

It was 8am and I was at InTOUR LA, a convention-style event that featured some of the most massive YouTube and Vine stars, there to hang out, perform, entertain, and meet their fans — almost all of whom were girls, ages twelve to fourteen. Since the fans were minors, each purchased ticket included a complimentary ticket for a parent or guardian. Thought somewhat less excited, the moms and dads stood in line with their daughters, sipping Starbucks from across the street and looking bewildered as their kids yelped and gasped and squealed.

InTour

I watched girls line up, jittery and shaky, waiting to angle their camera just so, in order to get a selfie with their idols.

There was no security guard, no one pushing them off. Hugs were encouraged.

I ran into two girls who were standing at the front of the line. Alissa and Maria, 13 and 14, respectively, stood quietly, holding signs and talking to each other. Their mothers flanked them on both sides. They told me they were there to see Connor Franta “mostly, but everyone is really good.” Franta, whom we wrote about, is a YouTube phenomenon who creates vlogs and posts them a few times a week. He has 3 million subscribers, a smile that could charm a snake, and, the girls tell me, “a really good personality.”

The two girls met via Twitter, they said, and they had been talking online for months before meeting for the first time in line that morning, waiting to see their teen idols.

“I think it’s good,” Maria’s mom told me. “I think in the beginning, you worry — worry that your kid is in the other room talking to someone not good for them or someone dangerous, and then you realize it’s okay.”

Attending INTOUR gave me a lot of insight to the rising popularity of online celebrity, but most of all it proved one thing: if you’re a 14-year-old girl with an internet connection, it’s a beautiful time to be alive.

INTOUR

“It’s a culture of access,” Maria Gonima of Fullscreen, a company that represents and manages YouTube talent, later told me.

And that access is increasingly posing a real threat to mainstream celebrity.

Think about the teen bubblegum pop of the late 90s. There was Britney and the Backstreet Boys, NSYNC and 98º. Before them, New Kids On The Block. All of them had fans — loads of them — but they remained at a distance, penned behind barricades both literal and psychological. Except for an occasional autograph, there was no way to break the fourth wall.

There was no Twitter, no YouTube, no Instagram commenting system or the hope, the dream, that a celebrity would see something you created for them. Unless, of course, you knew where to send them fan mail. (Author’s note: I am still waiting for a letter back from Candace Cameron, who played eldest daughter DJ Tanner on “Full House.”)

The closest thing we had to today’s digitized groupie nation were membership clubs we had to pay for; the going rate was around twenty bucks a year for a headshot with a copied signature and maybe some bullshit trading cards.

There was no telling who else was in the club, no making a new friend through a shared appreciation for a favorite star. And while our lockers were plastered with pictures ripped out of Teen Beat magazines, today’s superfans create Tumblrs dedicated to their crushes, drawing followers and fans of their own.

As Taylor Swift put it in her July oped in the Wall Street Journal, “I haven't been asked for an autograph since the invention of the iPhone with a front-facing camera. The only memento "kids these days" want is a selfie. It's part of the new currency, which seems to be ‘how many followers you have on Instagram.’”InTour

Today, the hordes of screaming girls are more than a demographic — they’re a community. Sure, they can be marketed to and exploited by advertisers, just like we were, but the power has definitively shifted.   

The stars of YouTube and Vine don’t just owe their success to their fans, as celebrities always have, at least in some abstract way. They would scarcely exist without them. Follower counts are power — perhaps the only power that truly matters anymore. Record deals and marketing budgets are nice, but they pale next to the potential viral impact of a few million Instagram followers, or Twitter followers, or Facebook friends.  

Today's stars are made not from the meetings rooms of big-time executives packaging a picture-perfect ideal of teen lust, but in the bedrooms — or wherever the screens are — of “normal kids” all over the country, all over the world.

It was apparent at INTOUR, as I watched hundreds of teenage girls get their phones ready before meeting the dozen or so YouTube stars — people like Connor Franta, Ricky Dillon, and JC Caylen — who were in attendance: the barrier between fans and celebrities has all but fallen. We all exist somewhere on the spectrum of renown.  A selfie with a superstar is still a selfie— by its very nature it insists that the idol and the worshipper be on precisely the same plane. Well, not precisely, since the fan is the one with the real power: the one who owns the camera, selects the shot, controls the image, and publishes it for the world to see.

The biggest celebrities know this, and the court their fans online assiduously. Rather than constructing an image of perfection, as stars and their handlers have long done, they’re falling all over themselves to prove they’re normal.

Because fame today increasingly has to be measurable and trackable in order to be monetized, and if the fans lose drift away, there’s not much left to work with.

Don’t let the squeals fool you. Social media has put 13-year-old girls in a rare position of power, and they’re not afraid to use it.

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The Creator Of 'Super Smash Bros.' Once Worked 13 Months In A Row Without A Single Day Off

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Super Smash Bros.

It's not easy being a video game developer. 

Masahiro Sakurai, the director of the game "Super Smash Bros.," which will be released for the Wii U at the end of November, wrote about his experience making the game in a column in Weekly Famitsu.

As director, he's in charge of overseeing everything having to do with "Super Smash Bros.," according to Kotaku, which translated pieces of the column. That includes everything from animations to editing what each player can do. 

Sakurai worked on the previous installment of "Smash Bros.," called "Super Smash Bros. Melee," for 13 months in a row without a day off. 

"Towards the end, there were instances where I would work for 40 hours straight and then take 4 hours off to go home and sleep," Sakurai writes. 

Although his workload for the new "Smash Bros." game wasn't quite as intense, he says that he still had to "work from mornings to late nights, even on weekends and holidays."

"I hardly have any free time, let alone time to play other games," he writes.

That's because there are a ton of new features in the new "Smash Bros." game, not to mention the fact that it was simultaneously produced with the version for Nintendo's 3DS handheld console. 

But still, even with the long hours and the hard work, Sakurai admits he's still trying to keep healthy. "I'm not depressed and I continue to remain healthy and positive, but developing 'Smash Bros.' is beyond hard," he writes.

It's no wonder that so much pressure is on him. Nintendo reported strong earnings this week, saying that it was on track to post its first profit in four years, according to the BBC. And that's thanks to games like "Super Smash Bros."

In a financial results briefing on Thursday, Nintendo president and CEO Satoru Iwata says strong interest in "Smash Bros." will give a huge boost to console sales. "Super Smash Bros." for the 3DS was released in September, and has already sold more than 3 million units.

"Since characters from various Nintendo games appear in 'Super Smash Bros.,' consumers naturally get to know the entire lineup of Nintendo IP and this title could make them interested in other game franchises," Iwata said. "In other words, the more this game is played, the higher the overall value of the Nintendo IP lineup becomes."

SEE ALSO: Not Even Mike Tyson Himself Can Beat 'Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!'

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Stephen Hawking Gave Filmmakers A Priceless Gift After Watching The New Movie About His Life

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The Theory of Everything stephen hawking

Actor Eddie Redmayne, 32, was lucky to get the role of famed physicist Stephen Hawking in the upcoming film, "The Theory of Everything"  but it came with a lot of pressure.

Hawking himself , now 72, would be judging the young actor's performance. 

Hawking trekked to London to screen the film ahead of its November 7th release. Before watching the movie, Redmayne told Variety the cosmologist warned: "I’ll let you know what I think — good or otherwise.' I said, ‘Stephen, if it’s otherwise, you don’t need to go into details.'"

When the film screening was complete, Hawking was overcome with emotion (via Variety):

Stephen Hawking

After the lights came up, a nurse wiped a tear from Hawking’s eye. He called the film “broadly true,” and even celebrated with the film’s director James Marsh and screenwriter Anthony McCarten at a bar where he sipped champagne from a teaspoon. “He emailed us,” Marsh says, “and said there were certain points when he thought he was watching himself.”

Hawking was so happy with the movie that he told filmmakers he would allow them to swap the synthetic voice they had been forced to create and replace it with his own, trademarked computerized version. “We spent a lot of time and money trying to reproduce the voice, but we never got it,” McCarten told Variety.

stephen hawking the theory of everything

Redmayne was thrilled after he heard about Hawking’s offer, believing it was a stamp of approval on a performance he still questioned.

“You’re just hoping to get there,” Redmayne said. “Yet there’s this constant frustration — it’s always underwhelming, because you never quite make it. But with his specific voice, it’s an actor’s dream. You’re one step closer to the truth.”

Hawking's "voice," as he explains on his website, is a computer-based communication system that has been provided by Intel since 1997. To learn more about how it works, click here.

Watch "The Theory of Everything" trailer below:

SEE ALSO: The Intense, 4-Month Training Eddie Redmayne Went Through To Play Stephen Hawking

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James Cameron: Virtual Reality 'Is A Yawn'

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james cameron

A lot of people are really excited about the potential of virtual reality.

Facebook bought virtual reality startup, Oculus Rift VR, for $2 billion at the end of MarchGoogle has it's own cardboard(!) virtual headset. You can build your own for a cool $25. 

If you haven't tried out either, they're extremely immersive experiences which put you right in the middle of a game or location. 

However, James Cameron isn't convinced it's the next big thing. 

Speaking at a Wall Street Journal conference panel, the director who is responsible for the two highest-grossing movies of all time — "Titanic" and "Avatar" — and who is known for pushing the limits of technology on screen said he's not impressed with virtual the tech.

We first noticed the director's comments on Cinemablend via The Hollywood Reporter.

"There seems to be a lot of excitement around something that, to me, is a yawn, frankly," Cameron said at the conference. "The question that always occurred to me is, when is it going to be mature, when is it going to be accepted by the public at large, when are people going to start authoring in VR and what will that be?" 

Cameron critiqued the technology for being limited to standing.

Oculus rift crystal cove

"What will the level of interactivity with the user be other than just ‘I can stand and look around,'" he added. "If you want to move through a virtual reality it’s called a video game, it’s been around forever."

That's not the sort of thing Mark Zuckerberg wants to hear, but don't worry Zuck, Cameron says the Oculus isn't that bad.

"Oculus Rift is fine, it’s got a good display and that sort of thing," said Cameron.

Cameron is working on three "Avatar" sequels which are expected to be released in theaters 2016, 2017, and 2018.

SEE ALSO: James Cameron explains how he wrote 3 "Avatar" sequels simultaneously

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