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Knocked Up Stars Reunite For Samsung Super Bowl Ad

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seth rogen paul rudd

Funnymen Seth Rogen and Paul Rudd are starring in Samsung's two-minute long Super Bowl ad called "The Big Pitch," reports Mashable's Todd Wasserman.

A spokesperson told Mashable that the ad "shows Rogen and Rudd on a quest to become the Next Big Thing."

This, of course, alludes to Samsung's insanely popular, Apple-bashing spot titled "The Next Big Thing Is Already Here," which was 2012's most popular tech ad.

While you might expect Judd Apatow to direct his regulars in the commercial, "Iron Man" director Jon Farveau actually took the lead.

A 30-second Super Bowl commercial slot averaged at $3.8 million, so Samsung has invested heavily in the 72andSunny-created ad.

Tune in February 3 to see if it meets expectations — and to compare it to competitor Blackberry's first-ever Super Bowl ad.

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Blackmail And Acid Attacks Are Making The World Of Russian Ballet Sound Like A Terrifying Place

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Svetlana Lunkina, renowned Russian ballerina with the famed Bolshoi Theatre, this week told a Russian newspaper that she is afraid to return home to Moscow due to threats on her life.

33-year-old Lunkina, currently in Canada, told daily newspaper Izvestia that she had been facing threats and blackmail, though she did not elaborate on them. “These people have no right to interfere in our [ family's] private lives or my professional work," she said. According to the Toronto Star, she plans to start a dance studio in Canada rather than return home.

This scandal may sound extreme for the world of ballet, but for the Bolshoi Theatre, one of the world's premier ballet theaters, it seems to be par for the course.

Earlier this month Sergei Filin, the 42-year-old former dancer who now serves as the theater's artistic director, was attacked by a masked man on the streets of Moscow.

The Guardian reports that a man walked up to Filin near his home late on 17th of January, asked for him by name, and threw acid into his face, covering him with third degree burns and severely damaging his eyesight.

Following the incident, Filin's mother told the Russian press that her son had been receiving threatening phone calls for a weeks, and a Bolshoi spokesperson said his tires had been slashed a number of times. Bolshoi staff members believe that the attack was the result of professional jealousy.

This video shows a BBC interview with Filin after the attack. He says he forgives his attacker:

On the surface at least, there appears to be no clear link between the two incidents. Ellen Barry at the New York Times writes:

Six months ago [Lunkina] left Russia for Canada, amid a deepening conflict between her husband, Vladislav Moskalev, and a partner in a film that would have told the story of the ballerina Mathilde Kschessinska, who was the lover of the future Nicholas II, Russia’s last czar.  She said that letters damaging her reputation had been sent to the world’s leading ballet companies and that her personal e-mail had been hacked.

However, both incidents appear to be part of a history of animosity of at the theater and Russia's ballet world. Gennady Yanin, the artistic director who preceded Filin, resigned less than two years ago after sexually explicit images of a man who resembled him were sent to hundreds of e-mail addresses around Russia — an apparent smear attempt.

The New York Times points out that there have long been stories about foul play in the theater's history. "There are whispers of needles inserted in costumes, to be discovered in midpirouette, or — the worst — broken glass nestled in the tip of a toeshoe," Ellen Barry wrote after the attack on Filin.

In Filin's case, some appear to be pointing towards a rivalry with Nikolai Tsiskaridze, star principal dancer with the Bolshoi Ballet. Tsiskardize has been questioned as a witness to the crime, but denies any involvement.

Anatoly Iksanov, general director of the Bolshoi Theatre, certainly doesn't seem to be sympathetic of Filin. Though he just stops short of accusing him of involvement in the attack on Filin with the Daily Telegraph, he does tell the reporter, "Tsiskaridze is like an abscess.”

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Here Are All Of The Ads You'll See On Super Bowl Sunday

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sodastream super bowl ad

Super Bowl XLVII might not air until Feb. 3, 2013, but you don't have to wait until Sunday to check out the ads.

Skip straight to the ads →

With some advertisers shelling out as much as $4 million for a 30-second time slot, companies started rolling out teasers for their big game commercials weeks ago to get the most bang for their buck. 

And with just four days to go before the game, almost every single company has unveiled the ad it will be playing in the game.

Tell us your favorites in the comments and check back at this story or Business Insider's Advertising news channel in the days leading up to Super Bowl Sunday as more commercials get released.

Here we go!



Budweiser Black Crown — "Coronation" will be the first ad in the Super Bowl. "Coronation" (see teaser below) will also play in the first quarter.

Created by Anomaly.



Audi — "Prom"

Created by Venables, Bell and Partners.



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How Lucasfilm's Kathleen Kennedy Is Going To Ensure The New 'Star Wars' Is Awesome

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Kathleen Kennedy JJ AbramsKathleen Kennedy, the co-chair of Lucasfilm, holds the future of the force in her hands.

She's been one the creative minds behind a lot of Hollywood hits since the late '70s, working in particular with Steven Spielberg on his films from "1941" to Oscar-nominated "Lincoln."

And, she's already going to great lengths for "Star Wars," bringing on Oscar-winning screenwriter Michael Arndt ("Toy Story 3") and original franchise writer Lawrence Kasdan as a consult.

Now, Kennedy's magically enlisted the talent of J.J. Abrams as director—a task that she went to great lengths to secure. 

In her first in-depth interview since acquiring the reigns of Lucasfilm, Kennedy opened up to The Hollywood Reporter not only on the measures she's taken to revive Lucas' coveted franchise, but also on her past works revealing that she has the gusto to take on The Force.

If you've been worried, or are still concerned about the future of "Star Wars," it's time to take a breather. Here's why ...

Kennedy persuaded J.J. Abrams to direct the new "Star Wars," even after he turned down the job.

In November, Abrams told EW and various outlets he would be too busy with original projects to work on "Star Wars."

The "Star Wars" executive producer spoke and met with J.J. Abrams anyway in December in hopes to change his mind.

"We spent a lot of time talking about how meaningful "Star Wars" is and the depth of the mythology that George has created and how we carry that into the next chapter," Kennedy said



All she had to do was say "please."

"I learned firsthand how incredible and persuasive she is," said Abrams. "The thing about any pre-existing franchise -- I'd sort of done that. But when I met with Kathy, it was suddenly very tantalizing."

Or, she's just very good with Jedi mind tricks because all Kennedy said she asked Abrams was to "Please do 'Star Wars.'"



She already has the respect of top directors.

"Social Network" director David Fincher recalled his working relationship with Kennedy:

"When you, as a director -- call Kathy and say 'I need this …' she can actually remember the meeting where you explained why something was LINCHPIN to an effect you were trying to create -- or helped support an idea that you felt was essential to the story you are telling, and SHE CAN ACT ON IT.

So when Kennedy said Abrams brought up his "very genuine concerns" about other projects and the impact the role would take on his family she hinted the timeframe of the film's release may alter.



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Alicia Keys Is BlackBerry's New Global Creative Director [THE BRIEF]

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alicia keys

Good morning, AdLand. Here's what you need to know today:

After unveiling its new BlackBerry, RIM made some other announcements as well, including that singer Alicia Keys is the company's new global creative director. Although Gizmodo pointed out that the singer has previously been doing a lot of tweeting from her iPhone.

After a four year partnership, Vonage replaced TBWA/Chiat/Day with JWT for its creative tasks.

Bazooka Candy is completely rebranding itself.

Craig Bierley is GM's new director of advertising for Cadillac. He has been at the company since 2002.

Brands are starting to get on Vine.

Arnold has been acquiring some new talent. Martin Laiks joined the company to lead Sanofi business from DraftFCB, where he was an EVP group account director. Caroline price was hired to be an SVP marketing director from Grey Group.

IBM has a new Tumblr about innovation.

Previously on BusinessInsider Advertising:

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'Iron Man' Falls To Earth In This New Movie Poster

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Marvel has released a new poster for "Iron Man 3" and it's brilliant.

It strays from the conventions of a typical comic book and film poster by displaying our hero, Tony Stark, in a rare vulnerable, defeating position as he frefalls to Earth.

There aren't any other posters we can think of where you normally see the protagonist of the film upside down. 

A more chilling, typical poster for the film would have simply shown Stark's heavily damaged Iron Man mask; however, we've seen that done before.

iron man 3 tony stark

If you need more "Iron Man," there will be a new teaser for the film running during the Super Bowl.

SEE ALSO: Disney finally put it's Oscar-nominated short "Paperman" online >

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Watch The Teaser For Samsung's Super Bowl Ad Starring Paul Rudd And Seth Rogen

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Samsung just released its Super Bowl ad teaser, in which Paul Rudd and Seth Rogen pitch their ideas for an actual two-minute long big game spot to Bob Odenkirk from the "Mr. Show."

The catch — the two actors can't say the words "Super Bowl," "The 49ers," or "The Ravens." (Which are actual rules.)

But "el plato supremo," "50 minus 1ers" and "Baltimore Blackbirds" are fine.

72andSunny is the shop behind Samsung's regularly hilarious commercials. The Super Bowl ad will be directed by "Iron Man" director Jon Favreau, and if this is any indication, it's going to be pretty good.

Mashable reports we can expect the full Super Bowl ad later this week.

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Naomi Campbell Vindicated In Dispute Over Elephant Polo Tournament Report

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Naomi Campbell

Naomi Campbell has received an apology and "substantial" libel damages from the Daily Telegraph over an article that wrongly claimed she organised an elephant polo tournament in India.

The supermodel complained that the article, published on 3 November 2012 under the headline "Elephant polo at Campbell's party criticised", damaged her reputation by falsely stating that she planned the controversial sport for a birthday party in Jodhpur.

The article was republished widely online and prompted protests against Campbell by animal rights groups. Indian government departments wrote to Campbell's representatives to complain, according to her lawyers.

In a statement read at the high court on Thursday, Gideon Benaim, the lawyer for Campbell, said the Telegraph had agreed to apologise and withdrawn the allegations.

In a statement at the high court on Thursday, Campbell said: "There were never plans to hold an elephant polo tournament, so that allegations should not have been published. However I am glad that the matter has been resolved and I accept the newspaper's apology."

Benaim said in the statement that the article had caused "a storm of adverse publicity" against the supermodel.

He added: "Readers were told that elephant polo was cruel and depended upon the violent abuse of the animals by the mahouts who trained them, and that they were consistently kept in chains and driven insane by their treatment. In fact, this story was story was simply false and the criticisms unfounded. There were never any plans for an elephant polo tournament at the birthday celebrations and Ms Campbell had neither organised nor requested the organisation of any such tournament."

The Daily Telegraph made no effort to contact Campbell before publishing the story, he said.

Speaking outside the high court after the hearing, Benaim declined to reveal the sum of the substantial damages and legal costs.

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Porn Site Offering $150K For Scandalous Photo Of Arnold Schwarzenegger — Here's Today's Buzz

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Arnold Schwarzenegger shirtless

SEE ALSO: "Iron Man" falls to earth in this brand new movie poster >

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Please Let This Photo Of Mark Zuckerberg At A Rave Be Real (FB)

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Everyone needs to unwind sometimes, even if you're the 20-something multi-billionaire CEO of Facebook.

Gawker found this picture of Mark Zuckerberg profusely sweating and dancing at a party. While the pic could be Photoshopped it looks exactly like him. 

We hope it's real because it's great to see Zuck living it up and trying to feign normalcy.

mark zuckerberg at a rave

Don't Miss: Facebook Mobile Users Surpass Desktop Users For The First Time >

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Watch Jennifer Lawrence's First Gig: An MTV 'My Super Sweet 16' Promo

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During her SAG Awards acceptance speech, "Silver Linings Playbook" actress Jennifer Lawrence thanked MTV.

"I'll explain that," the 22-year-old said while on stage accepting her Best Actress award. "I earned my SAG card when I was 14, I did an MTV promo for 'My Super Sweet 16.' And I remember getting it in the mail and it being the best day in my entire life, because it officially made me a professional actor."

Watch Lawrence deliver her best "Mean Girls" impersonation below:

SEE ALSO: Here's what made Jennifer Lawrence's dress slip at the SAG Awards >

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Why Movies Today Are Longer Than Ever Before

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anne hathaway les miserables

If you feel like the time you spend sitting in movie theaters has been getting longer, you're not imagining it — you are.

This past holiday, if you went to theaters to see "Les Misérables," "Django Unchained," and "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" you spent 492 minutes (537 if you account for an added 45 minutes of trailers and previews). That's nearly nine hours!

We've compared the length of the highest-grossing films and big theatrical releases of the past few years. The findings show we're more inclined to sit in theaters longer today to see the most-anticipated films of the year. And, the trend shows no sign of stopping.

longest theatrical releases

Looking at the average movie length of the ten highest-grossing movies of each year for the past decade, Hollywood blockbuster's have gone from just under two hours to more than 130 minutes in length.

average movie length past decade
 
Going back another decade, movies today are 1.2 times longer than they were in 1992.
 
Here are the running times for the five highest-grossing films of '92:
 
"Aladdin"90 minutes
"Home Alone 2"120 minutes
"Batman Returns"126 minutes
"Lethal Weapon 3"118 minutes
"A Few Good Men"  138 minutes
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
And, here are those from 2012:
 

"The Avengers"

143 minutes
"The Dark Knight Rises"165 minutes
"The Hunger Games"142 minutes
"Skyfall"143 minutes
"The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2"  115 minutes
 
The average of the highest-grossing films from 20 years ago is 118.4 minutes compared to this year's 141.6 minutes.
 
So, why are so many movies today longer? 
 
Rolling Stone film critic Peter Travers tells The Daily Beast he blames the Oscar season. 

“Hollywood studios believe movies are weighed by the pound when it comes to Academy thinking," says Travers. "If it ain’t long, it ain’t winning. Stupid, I know, since The Artist and The King’s Speech weren’t long. But ever since 'Gone With the Wind' and 'Ben-Hur' and 'Lawrence of Arabia,' continuing through 'Titanic,' 'Braveheart,' 'Gladiator,' and 'Lord of the Rings,' they think Oscar will not take any epic seriously if it’s under two hours.”
 
This year, two of the year's highest-grossing movies are nominated for Oscars ("Skyfall" and "The Hobbit") while three of the longest-running films of the year are nominated for Best Picture ("Django Unchained," "Les Misérables," and "Zero Dark Thirty"). 
 
All of this year's Oscar nominees, save one ("Beasts of the Southern Wild"), clock in at more than two hours. 

SEE ALSO: Roadmap To The Future

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BRUTAL: 50% Decline In TV Viewership Shows Why Your Cable Bill Is So High

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tv suicide

Morgan Stanley analyst Benjamin Swinburne and his team published a fascinating set of charts yesterday about the long, slow decline of old-fashioned broadcast and cable TV, and the number of ad dollars chasing the dinosaur medium.

There has been a 50 percent collapse in broadcast TV audience ratings since 2002, Swinburne says.

Part of Swinburne's case is that TV audiences have declined, but because those audiences still remain relatively large more ad dollars have continued to target them. (It's a classic "supply vs. demand" issue: as the number of big, unfragmented audiences declines, they become more valuable.)

At the same time, TV companies have relied more and more on subscription revenue rather than ad revenue to make their numbers.

The result is that the TV business is financially healthy — even as fewer people pay more to watch it.

Swinburne is bullish on media stocks overall. He doesn't see "cord-cutting" — the act of doing without TV altogether — as a significant force, yet. "We believe lower-than-average Pay TV penetration in the under-30 demo is largely based on income level," he writes.

At Business Insider, we have disputed that. We see a generational shift, in which younger viewers don't want cable or satellite service, just wireless internet that allows them to view video on their tablets and laptops.

Here's a small selection of charts from Swinburne's excellent note, showing the perils facing TV.

First, online and DVR viewing continues to eat into the core live TV business:

Morgan Stanley TV

At the same time, there has been a 50 percent collapse in broadcast TV ratings in the last decade. (Ad revenues, though, have remained resilient):

Morgan Stanley TV

So advertisers are now paying much more, for much less:

Morgan Stanley TV

And the TV business relies more heavily on subscriptions than it used to, and ad revenue as a portion of total revenue across all companies is declining:

Morgan Stanley TV

SEE ALSO: CHARTS: Why Audience Ratings Have Collapsed For Cable TV Shows

SEE ALSO: The Death of Television May Be Just 5 Years Away

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These Celebrity Purchases Cost More Than Your Mortgage

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keshaHere’s a question: What puts the dollar sign in Ke$ha‘s name?

Glitter, of course … lots and lots of glitter.

In fact, the “Tik Tok” singer has been known to spend more money in one month to feed her glitter habit than most people pay on their regular mortgage loan payment.

“It’s pretty exorbitant. It’s probably more like a few thousand every month,” she said in a 2011 Vanity Fair interview.

“If you come and see a show of mine, there is no shortage of glitter. By the end, everyone from the back of the auditorium to the very front is covered and potentially choking on glitter. I am shooting glitter from glitter guns and out of every orifice in my body. It’s really a big part of what I do.”

But if you think the Ke$ha glitter budget is over the top, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

Take a look at some of these other extravagantly ridiculous tabs run up by celebrities.

They may seem outrageous, frivolous, self-indulgent and even wasteful — but of course, we normal folk just won’t ever understand why they do it.

Cashing In on Celebrity Expenses

The average American, according to Business Insider, spends $16,600 on their yearly mortgage payments — roughly one-quarter of their annual income. As for celebrities? That’s small change.

In a report from last year, BI’s Mandi Woodruff sourced a New York Magazine expose that revealed insider info on the indulgences of some unnamed A-listers.

It’s true: They really do pay $100,000 for their 6-year-old’s personal stylist, and $24,000 on pool maintenance. That’s maintenance, not the actual pool.

Is it for practical purposes, or just for pure spectacle? Like most things celebrities spend thousands, or millions, on, the magnitude of their spending habits increases in accord with their rising Hollywood status. Said Ke$ha about her glitter affectation:

“I started thinking,” she said, “why just do my eyes? Why not my entire body? And at the end of my shows why don’t I put a backpack on that’s like a hand-held cannon and blast glitter at people? So not only do I look attractive, but so does everybody who’s dancing? It’s kind of like become my thing.”

Hey, at least she took the time to explain her rationale. Other celebrities remain enigmatic in their bizarro spending ways.

1. A plane ticket for Bono’s hat.

The U2 frontman is basically rock ‘n roll’s Gandhi, known for channeling his influence into humanitarian and philanthropic deeds. Though they say, “Once a rock star, always a rock star,” in Bono’s case, “Where the heads have no hats” is more appropriate:

On a 2005 tour, the singer was without his favorite hat and paid $1,700 to fly his favorite piece of head wear, first class, from London to Italy. Whatever extra was paid for the hat’s limousine pickup from airport, to hotel, to concert venue, to Bono’s head, is anyone’s guess.

2. Nicolas Cage and his skull.

No, not his own noggin — though we all wonder what the heck was going on in Nicolas Cage’s head with all those bad financial decisions that lead to IRS problems and bankruptcy.

One contribution to Cage’s money downfall could be his 2007 purchase of a dinosaur skull to the tune of $267,000, a price that most people would consider luxurious in a new, single family home. The crazy part is that Cage outbid fellow thespian Leonardo DiCaprio for ownership of the fossilized cranium.

3. Beyonce’s $100,000 leggings.

Everyone knows that in show business, bespoke stage clothes can demand a higher price tag, considering they’re not off the rack and all that. But six figures for one garment?

That’s what singer Beyonce Knowles paid for a pair of gold studded, Balenciaga leggings. Couldn’t she have just bought some at Target and customized them with some of Ke$ha’s gold glitter?

4. Lady Gaga’s ghost detector.

Or, an “electromagnetic field meter” is more like it. According to MSN.com, the singer, born as Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, is currently being haunted by a ghost named “Ryan,” and recently plonked down $50,000 for the field device to keep the paranormal activity away. What’s scarier than Gaga’s ghosts? Her publicist’s straight-faced response about the paranoid purchase:

“She (Lady Gaga) believes in paranormal activity and won’t take any risks when she is on the road,” they told MSN. “It’s important to her to be safe from spirits.”

5. Harry Potter’s $17,000 bed.

No Hogwarts cot will do for Daniel Radcliffe. Also reported by MSN, Harry Potter himself gets to sleep every night on a nice, custom-made mattress. Not just any mattress, but a lush bed cushion from Savoir, the 100-year-old luxury mattress maker.

Radcliffe didn’t exactly use any Harry Potter magic for this one, too — thanks to the films, the $17,000 he paid for this mattress would cover most people’s mortgages or rents for a year, or more.

Honorable mentions: In the late 1980s, actress Kim Basinger apparently purchased the entire town of Braselton, GA for $20 million, with the intent of turning it into a movie hub and tourist trap. The effort failed to garner any buzz, and millions of dollars were lost all around.

According to TheFrisky.com, rapper Bryan “Birdman” Williams recently became the fourth owner of an $8 million German sports car. Not BMW, not Mercedes, but elite automaker Maybach. The company’s halo car boasts 700 horsepower emanating from a 12-cylinder, twin turbo engine.

Tinseltown Thrift

Celebrities and responsible spending — it sounds like an oxymoron, but some celebrities are mindful of their money. Actress Zooey Deschanel, despite a very comfortable, low-million-dollar annual salary, is known to stick to a budget, save and donate money.

One of the best celebrity role models is rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson. Worth exponentially more than his stage name implies, the rapper has carefully helped his $250 million fortune grow through a number of wise, lucrative investments and savings strategies.

Will Ke$ha ever follow the same financial strategy? Unlikely, with her ultimate glitter goal in mind.

“It’s my goal to cover the planet in glitter and take the f— over,” she says. “I can’t do that if I don’t have a s— ton of glitter."

SEE ALSO: 7 signs you might be living beyond your means >

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'Sin City' Director Robert Rodriguez Bullied Steve Wozniak, $11M Lawsuit Claims

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steve wozniak"Sin City" director Robert Rodriguez has been slapped with an $11 million lawsuit claiming that he bullied Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, in order to scuttle a film and associated app game featuring actor Danny Trejo, because the film and game would have taken attention away from his upcoming film, "Machete Kills."

In the complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in Southern Utah, ITN Flix claims that it entered into an agreement with Trejo -- who frequently appears in Rodriguez's films, including "Machete Kills" -- for the actor to star in a series of vigilante films.

In order to generate additional publicity and revenue for the films, ITN says it entered into an agreement with gaming company react games to create a game app.

The suit claims that, thanks to an associate producer on the film project who was also a business associate of Wozniak's, the former Apple honcho agreed participate in the app, leading to the game "Danny Trejo's Vengeance: Woz With a Coz."

The suit clams that the game, which was due for a November 2012 release, would have generated about $5 million in sales monthly.

However, according to ITN's complaint, Rodriguez -- fearful that another film starring Trejo would detract from "Machete Kills" -- "set in motion a plan to diminish ITN's reputation and stifle the success of the Film and the App Game."

That plan, the suit claims, included Rodriguez using "his means, connections and influence to threaten, intimidate and bully Wozniak into pulling support of the game."

According to the suit, Trejo's agent, Gloria Hinojosa -- also named as a defendant in the suit -- worked with Rodriguez to torpedo the film and game, contacting Wozniak and his wife Janet and telling them that the owner of ITN "was a fraud and a con man."

Wozniak subsequently pulled his support for the game, the suit says, destroying the profit potential for the game.

The suit, which alleges intentional interference with economic relations, defamation and false light, and civil conspiracy, claims that ITN is out "at least  $11 million dollars" in revenue that the game could have provided.

ITN is seeking an injunction and restraining order preventing Rodriguez and Hinojosa from making defamatory comments about the company, plus consequential damages "of at least $11 million" and other damages, along with interest, attorneys' fees and court costs.

TheWrap has been unable to reach Rodriguez's lawyer in the suit. Hinojosa has not yet responded to TheWrap's request for comment.

Pamela Chelin contributed to this report.

SEE ALSO: How Lucasfilm's Kathleen Kennedy Is Going To Ensure The New 'Star Wars' Is Awesome

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Arnold Schwarzenegger Is Trying To Launch A 'Sexy, Hip' Climate Change Movement

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arnold schwarzenegger and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso

Arnold Schwarzenegger called Thursday for an end to "doom and gloom" environmentalism as he hosted the first conference of his new green movement fostering action by local governments and individuals.

"If we want to inspire the world, it is time for us to forget about the old way of talking about climate change, where we crush people, where we overwhelm people with data," the former California governor, bodybuilder and film star said.

"There is a new way, a more sexy, a more hip way. Instead of using doom and gloom and telling people what they can't do, we should make them part of our movement and tell them what they can do," he said.

"I mean I still drive my Hummers but now they are all on hydrogen and biofuel ... We need to send a message that we can live the same life, just with cleaner technology."

Following his success implementing environmental legislation in California ahead of federal US action, Schwarzenegger's created the R20 Regions of Climate Action movement in 2010.

It is aimed at getting other regions, states and cities to follow the Golden State's example in the absence of effective national and international agreements on reducing carbon emissions widely blamed for the Earth's climate becoming more volatile in recent decades.

"The old way was to wait for the capitals, or an international agreement to create a sustainable energy future, is over," Schwarzenegger, 65, told the conference of around 800 people in his native Austria.

"We believe in a new way, in moving forward at a subnational level. We can't be paralyzed, waiting for an international agreement or federal action or anything else," Schwarzenegger said.

"I believe we should move forward at a subnational level, in the states, in the provinces, in the cities, in the private sector, in the academic sector and in the non-profits. These should be defined by our momentum, not our hesitation."

Attendees in Vienna included Jose Manuel Barroso, European Commission president, but absent were green pressure groups such as Greenpeace or WWF, who complained last week that the event risked being "elitist" and "Greenwashing".

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Talent Agency Wants $1 Million From Late Director Tony Scott For These Hits

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Tony Scott and family

When "Top Gun" director Tony Scott jumped to his death off a California bridge last August, he left behind an alleged $1 million in unpaid commissions to his powerhouse talent agency, Creative Artists Agency (CAA).

This week, CAA filed a creditor's claim against Scott's estate in L.A. County Superior Court seeking $1,040,522 — to be exact  in unpaid commissions from several film projects.

CAA says Scott owes the agency a 10 percent cut of his fees (at least) — which aren't cheap.

Here's what Scott made to direct the below films, according to docs obtained by TMZ:

And here's what CAA wants in commissions from Scott's films:

"This is a standard legal procedure," a Scott family representative told The Hollywood Reporter. "The Scott estate has every intention to pay as soon as possible. Tony and CAA had a wonderful relationship."

SEE ALSO: How Lucasfilm co-chair Kathleen Kennedy is going to ensure the new 'Star Wars' is still awesome >

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Beyoncé Reveals She Suffered Miscarriage In New HBO Doc

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beyonce

In her upcoming HBO documentary "Life Is But a Dream," Beyoncé reveals she suffered a miscarriage, calling it "The saddest thing I've ever been through."

In the doc premiering February 16, the 31-year-old singer explains, "About two years ago, I was pregnant for the first time. And I heard the heartbeat, which was the most beautiful music I ever heard in my life."

Beyoncé continues, "I envisioned what my child would look like ... I was feeling very maternal."

Jay-Z even references their loss in his song "Glory," rapping, "Last time the miscarriage was so tragic/We was afraid you'd disappear/But nah baby you magic."

Beyonce

Beyoncé, for her part, has never spoken about the miscarriage ... until now.

But the Super Bowl halftime singer dealt with her tragedy by going back into the recording studio.

"I went into the studio and wrote the saddest song I've ever written in my life," she says, "And it was actually the first song I wrote for my album. It was the best form of therapy for me, because it was the saddest thing I've ever been through."

But soon after, Beyoncé and Jay-Z learned another child was on the way.

Beyonce pregnantWhen discussing her daughter Blue Ivy, the new mom says, "Being pregnant was very much like falling in love. You are so open. You are so overjoyed. There's no words that can express having a baby growing inside of you, so of course you want to scream it out and tell everyone."

The power couple eventually did reveal the news to the world when Beyoncé surprised everyone with her baby bump on-stage during a performance at the MTV Video Music Awards in August.

And despite being originally reluctant to let Beyoncé co-direct her own documentary, HBO programming president, Michael Lombardo, recently told GQ:

"You feel ... that vulnerability of someone searching for the comfort place where they're willing to be more than the image that has been fed to us—I was incredibly moved by that ... I dare anybody to tune in and turn it off."

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Beyonce Began Her Super Bowl Press Conference By Singing The National Anthem A Cappella

Pirate King Kim Dotcom Is Cracking Down On Piracy

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It only took a few days for some sneaky pirates to transform Kim Dotcom's totally legal new file-storage hub Mega into a file-sharing site that mimicked the old Megaupload, and it's only taken the last few hours for the former pirate king to fight back.

The upstart site, Mega-Search.me, indexed user-submitted media stored on Mega and puts it all in one easily searchable database. That included legal files as well as material that violates copyright, like some of the Girls episodes I found while searching the site — that is, before it stopped working a few minutes ago.

Now, instead of a list of available content, Mega-Search loads blank, with the following pop-up alert in French:

That translates, roughly, to this: "Due to a script developed by Mega to delete the the entirety of the the files indexed on Megasearch, the search engine is temporarily unavailable. A solution to address this problem will be underway soon." So, from the looks of it, somebody over at Mega doesn't want its users' suddenly legal files living on a possibly illegal search engine that works like a "full blown piracy site" as Wired's David Kravets put it.

All of which represents a pretty remarkable transformation for Kim Dotcom, an outspoken leader of the file-sharing movement whose legal troubles last year with Megaupload led him to create the decidedly (and perhaps ingeniously) pirate-free Mega proper. He's gone to great lengths to make his latest project bulletproof to international authorities, and he's not about to let some third-party kids ruin all that, apparently. After calling Mega the most "the most legally scrutinized Internet site in the history of the Internet," Dotcom proudly tweeted about his having gone legit:

Dotcom launched Mega on January 19, with a kind of super-encryption that instantly became a draw over his many competitors. Mega-Search quickly followed five days later. But even when Mega-Search worked, many of the links on the new site led to takedown notices due to Mega's strict piracy guidelines — a clear and detailed infringement policy gives the site the power to take down uploads that might violate copyright, even though they're encrypted. Dotcom's policy isn't just an easy way to get around the authorities — Mega has already complied with a number of DCMA notices, taking down all the suspect files within 48 hours, according to LeakID, which sent the complaints. Maybe it's just the legal scrutiny, or maybe Dotcom has moved on from his life of crime, but the pirate king will stand for piracy no more. Kim Dotcom, it appears, is cracking down.

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