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Stephen Fry And Elliott Spencer Treat Fans To New Wedding Photos On Twitter (PICS)

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Stephen Fry has given fans a look behind the scenes at his wedding to Elliott Spencer.

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The happy couple surprised us all when they announced that they had tied the knot over the weekend, with an image of them signing their registry.

They’ve now shared some more photos from their big day, including this picture of them wearing matching “groom” badges.




Good tie, Stephen.

Stephen also finally told us the one bit of wedding news we’ve all been dying to hear… yes, the wedding dinner did, indeed, include a nice cake, which they were photographed cutting together at home after the ceremony.




Didn’t take Elliott long to change out of that suit, did it?

The writer and broadcaster has since revealed on his Twitter page that the day after their wedding, the newlyweds spent the afternoon watching the snooker on telly.

And they say romance is dead, eh?

A friend of the newlyweds told The Sun earlier this year: “Stephen and Elliott get on brilliantly together. It’s fantastic to see Stephen with a smile on his face again.

“He has been very, very open about his battles with drugs and depression. Elliott seems to have given him the confidence to live his life again. It’s great to have the old Stephen back.”


Stephen later showed off his shiny new engagement ring while announcing which stars had been nominated for this year’s Baftas.



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12 Films to Watch in 2015

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You may have heard that 2015 is all set to be a remarkable year for cinema. It's true, there's never been a line-up of blockbusters like it, with huge titles liberally scattered across the calendar. It's not just huge franchises though, some of the medium's most revered directors return to the big screen and potential festival line-ups are buzzing with some of the most exciting talents working today. As with last January, to aid you with planning your year's cinemagoing, I've highlighted one film from each month that looks unmissable. It was hard narrowing it down to just one but I've concentrated hard and I think I've pulled it off.

Whiplash (16 January)

January is always the trickiest month to select just one title because there are just so many good films out, however, there is one film I'd pick above all others. Whiplash is the tale of a talented young jazz drummer, who joins a New York jazz conservatory and comes into conflict with a sociopathic instructor whose methods are unorthodox, to say the least. It's also my favourite film I've seen in the last year. The story is as tight as a drum (sorry), the two main performances by Miles Teller and J.K. Simmons are awards-worthy and it all builds to the most exciting climax of any film in living memory. Coupled with the fact the director was only 28 when he made it and it was all shot in 19 days, it's a cinematic miracle. It's already in cinemas, so whatever you do for the rest of January, don't miss this film.



It Follows (27 February)

Icon Entertainment is developing quite a track record for distributing the best in independent cinema. The second half of last year alone saw them release Cold In July, The Guest and The Babadook and surprisingly, the best is still to come with It Follows. A teenage girl (Maika Monroe) is afflicted with a sexually transmitted curse that results in a malevolent entity slowly following her wherever she goes and the only way to stop it is to pass it on to someone else. It's an ingenious concept, brilliantly executed with a haunting, piercing score and when I calmed down from the excitement of watching it, I realised I was severely creeped out. It's the horror film to beat in 2015.



Top Five (20 March)

Chris Rock is one of the most revered stand-up comedians of all time, yet his most famous screen role to date is probably in the Grown Ups franchise. I'm sure Chris isn't too happy about that, which is probably why he's written, directed and stars in this new comedy. He plays a comedian who tries to make it as a serious actor when his reality-TV star fiancée talks him into broadcasting their wedding on her TV show. Early word suggests that this is the first film to properly utilise Rock's stand-up persona, so that in itself makes it a must-see.



John Wick (10 April)

Keanu Reeves' career has generally been a succession of forgettable titles (did anyone see Henry's Crime?) punctuated by a blistering stunner (Point Break, Speed, The Matrix). He's recently had a succession of forgettable titles, so hopefully John Wick is the stunner to punctuate them. Reeves plays the titular character, who happens to be a retired hitman. As is always the case (has any hitman just stayed retired?) something brings him out of retirement and he has to exact vengeance on a succession of ne'er-do-wells in increasingly brutal fashion. The trailer is a knock-out and according to the stateside reviews, it delivers exactly what a film of this kind should do. Count me in.



Pitch Perfect 2 (15 May)

Some comedy sequels are not welcome but one that most definitely is, is Pitch Perfect 2. The first Pitch Perfect, aside from a couple of bum notes, was one of the more satisfying comedies of 2012 and as you'd expect from a film about acapella groups, it had some cracking musical numbers. This sequel reunites all the main characters and adds Hailee Steinfeld. Elizabeth Banks makes her directing debut and once again reprises her role as the acerbic commentator, Gail, while Anna Kendrick is set to retain the title of the most engaging person in film.



Jurassic World (12 June)

Dinosaurs are making a comeback in 2015, mark my words, and the main reason for that is Jurassic World. As we're all adults here, I'll take it as read that we've all seen Jurassic Park - I'm pretty sure it was part of my school's curriculum - and I'm sure we can all agree that it's still one of the best blockbusters of all time. Forget the not-so-great sequels (apart from that breaking glass bit in The Lost World), this is the Jurassic Park sequel I've been waiting for. The park is fully operational, hopefully with insurance, and the foolish park operators have decided that they need to create a new dinosaur to keep enticing the crowds. The ever-so-watchable Chris Pratt (The Lego Movie, Guardians Of The Galaxy) looks to continue his hot streak as the park ranger who has to tidy the ensuing mess up.



Inside Out (17 July)

For the first time in their history, Pixar have two films released in one calendar year in 2015 and the first to hit screens has the potential to be their best for years. Told from the perspective of the emotions inside the mind of a little girl, it's directed by one of Pixar's most talented directors, Pete Docter (Up, Monsters, Inc) and written by Michael Arndt (Toy Story 3). It's ingenious, inventive and something only Pixar would attempt, and likely pull off. This is the most exciting animated title in a year with a few and could be Pixar's biggest hit since Toy Story 3.



Trainwreck (28 August)

Over the last 15 years Judd Apatow has been one of the most influential names in comedy, producing Bridesmaids, Superbad and HBO television show, Girls amongst countless others, but his own directorial projects since Knocked Up have been met with ever decreasing fanfare. I'll accept that every film he's directed is at least 15 minutes too long (for Funny People, it's 45 minutes) but they're always perceptive, brilliantly cast, and most importantly, very funny. Trainwreck features relative newcomer, Amy Schumer, whose love-life is something of a disaster (hence, trainwreck). Bill Hader plays the man who may yet get the (love) train on the right tracks. As you'd expect, the support cast is a cracker, including Brie Larson, Tilda Swinton, Marisa Tomei and Daniel Radcliffe.

Triple Nine (11 September)

The best word to describe John Hillcoat's directorial career so far (The Proposition, The Road, Lawless) would probably be 'gritty' or 'dusty'. His next project looks like it fits more with the former than the latter. A gang of criminals and corrupt cops plan the murder of a police officer in order to pull off their biggest heist yet. Hillcoat has shown to date that he can attract the very best actors and he's done it again with Winslet, Harrelson, Affleck (C) and Ejiofor all saying yes to Triple Nine. Perhaps most intriguingly though, anyone who has seen The Walking Dead is bound to have some kind of crush on Norman Reedus, so seeing him in this on the big screen is set to be a treat.

Spectre (23 October)


In a year filled with big films, Spectre is surely the biggest. Skyfall broke UK box office records in 2012 becoming the first film to gross over £100m and it banked over $1billion worldwide too. If you were creating a list of ideal cast members for this 24th Bond film (and I'm not saying I didn't do this) Christoph Waltz would be top of the villain list and Lea Seydoux and Monica Bellucci would probably be battling it out for the top of the Bond girl list. So either the producers share my opinion or they stole my list, because they've all been signed up for Spectre. With Sam Mendes returning in the director's chair, expect the same level of craftsmanship and style as in Skyfall and this coupled with the return of Daniel Craig means that in 2015 Spectre is the film to beat.

The Martian (26 November)


There's no getting away from the fact that Ridley Scott hasn't made a classic film in decades but even his less notable projects have a level of craft and artistry that most big budget directors can't match. As someone who was very much pro-Prometheus, despite the idiocy of Fifield and Milburn, and even enjoyed the thick, slightly impenetrable dialogue in The Counsellor, I eagerly anticipate any project from one of the UK's greatest working directors. The Martian is based on Andy Weir's novel about an astronaut left stranded on Mars, who faces a fight for survival in the harshest environment. The cast is terrific - Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig - and one thing is certain, it'll look stunning. Fingers crossed that this is up there with Scott's best.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens (18 December)

In any year without a Bond film, this would be a near certainty for the title of biggest film of the year. JJ Abrams has swapped the Enterprise for the Millenium Falcon and he's very wisely signed up Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill and Carrie Fisher. The new cast members are intriguing too, with British actor John Boyega (Attack the Block) in the lead and Oscar Isaac and Adam Driver in supporting roles. The first trailer did a great job of removing any apprehension around bringing Star Wars back to the big screen and also making you forget Episodes I-III. As soon as Han Solo is seen back in the Falcon, any lingering doubts will surely be blown away. I can't wait.



Twelve months and twelve films and I didn't even mention the new films from Steven Spielberg (St. James' Place), Robert Zemeckis (The Walk) and Guillermo Del Toro (Crimson Peak). It all makes for what's shaping up to be a terrific year.

Kim Kardashian Slammed By PETA Over 'Fur Bikini' Instagram Photos, Shot By Husband, Kanye West (PICS)

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Kim Kardashian has come under fire after posing in what she has dubbed the “fur-kini”.

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The ‘Keeping Up With The Kardashians’ star was snapped cavorting in the snow in a string of Instagram photos, apparently taken by her husband, Kanye West, while wearing what appears to be a bikini made of fur.

To match her unusual choice of swimwear, Kim also donned some matching fur boots, because she wouldn’t want to catch a cold, would she?

Boots with the fur...

Ett foto publicerat av Kim Kardashian West (@kimkardashian)




Needless to say, animal rights organisation PETA weren’t exactly thrilled to see Kim galavanting around in fur, re-blogging a picture of Kim in her “fur-kini” and hitting out at the “disgusting legacy” they feel she is creating.




This isn’t the first time Kim has been criticised by PETA, after she was shown swimming with dolphins while on holiday last summer.

Senior Vice President Lisa Lange told Radar at the time: “Kim is free to leave the pool, but for the dolphins, it’s a lifetime sentence.

“Animals in 'petting pools' can become injured and anxious as a result of constant poking and prodding, and exposure to bacteria that they are not immune to can make them ill. The dolphins also often express their frustration through aggression.”


Even without the controversy, we still can’t see the “fur-kini” catching on, particularly in the middle of January. Despite the freezing weather, though, it seems Kim still can’t keep her clothes on, after baring her bum for yet another magazine photo-shoot, following on from the mass attention her “break the Internet” pictures created.



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Travelling Shots in Chantal Akerman's D'est (aka From the East, 1993)

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I asked Chantal Akerman what kind of conversations she would typically have with dolly grips about tracking shots in her movies. What do you mean, she said, we use a car and shoot out of the window! I was astonished, but then Akerman resists the usual kind of conversations about film.

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(Image courtesy of Paradise Films)

First of all, what is a 'dolly grip', in case you don't know what that it? A 'dolly' is the platform on wheels or whatever that runs along rails and allows the smooth movement of a heavy camera for film-making. The most famous dolly is the one supposedly invented by Fred Astaire and his team to follow his dance - in fact a huge dolly with complex crane contraption that allowed the camera to shoot low, or high, move forward and back as well as side to side, so that whatever he did the camera could follow (the image is the best that I could find of this contraption). The names of the dolly team on Top Hat are not credited on screen (you would need to see the call sheets stored somewhere in the RKO vaults to find that out), and yet the films are memorable because of the faultless work of the dolly grips, who judged the speed of the 'move-to-follow' (the phrase camera teams generally use), the coming to rest, the start of a move and the rhythm of it all to a tee. Oddly, seamless and choreographic movement of the camera such as this is becomes invisible because it is rooted in choreographed bodily movements.

What the camera sees and how it can move-to-follow was perhaps a familiar experience before even the advent of cinema, that is to anyone who has tried to conjure and hold an image in the mind - just close your eyes and imagine your walk to work. If a camera move is done well, we don't notice what a miracle it is. It is far from easy to move a camera around smoothly and in graceful fashion (at the time Top Hat was shot, a camera could weighed in at several hundredweight). It is just as far from easy to imagine walking around a vividly conceived cloister in a memory exercise, with reliably placed niches and corners which serve to trigger recall. The link between kinds of movement in these two realms seem to connect for me.

Moreover, that a movie camera moves for me evokes something of how the mind works - to hold something in the mind's eye is often to have to imagine a varying perspective on that thing. Still won't do.

Early cinema was intrigued by the 'phantom ride', the view from the front of a train or vehicle moving forward through the world. Such a subjective experience would have been most beguiling: an instantly comprehended filmic representation evoking a familiar first person movement through an environment. Indeed, speedy movement of a subjective point of view and a privileged world view are still the main sell that cinema has to offer.

But beyond such primitive, mesmeric allure, what about the movement of the camera? What if movement is not motivated by the demand to follow a human body in movement or to suggest a privileged spectatorship?

Chantal Akerman's work is far removed from that of Fred Astaire, of course. She is a single person, an auteur, a film-maker in complete charge of the process, deciding where the camera goes, what it sees, and what happens in front of it. Sometimes, she chooses even to appear in her own films. Mostly, her camera stays put, offering unblinking framing of spaces and entrances to spaces. Corridors and doorways are her frequent material. Akerman has, to generalise, been concerned with structuring what her stationary camera records. Perhaps budget constraints and artistic purposes happily coincided.

What of camera movement in Akerman's work? Hotel Monterey includes the suggestion of camera movement when shooting inside a lift reveals movement in the slit window of the lift as it ascends. Later, her camera creeps forward, then retreats in one of the narrow hotel corridors - a kind of 'phantom ride'. She panned the camera in one 360° shot then back in the reverse direction in La chambre. The camera reframes and holds choreographed movement in Les années 80 and Golden Eighties. The camera dollies in slightly in Le déménagement. While the camera is permitted its own motivation, not until her film D'est of 1993 would the camera become a protagonist, in the way that had become familiar as a trope of art house cinema in the later sixties and onwards. But as ever, Akerman is like no other film maker, and D'est moves seamlessly across genres, across modes of representation and without a bump into a new kind of cinema - one in which camera movement is central.

D'est is outwardly a 16mm documentary shot in Poland, East Germany (GDR) and the USSR, shot on trips taken as the Soviet system was about to collapse. Akerman has said she went 'while there was still time'. What kind of time, nor whose time, nor if there is any elsewhere (the suggestion may be that there is not!), I do not know. The film however avoids dialogue of any kind - though people often enough exchange words, they are not audible, and never subtitled. This is not silent film however, as the world is a noisy one, and one where cheesy pop music and stirring tunes play from speakers and loudspeakers. Dancing is allowed. The people in this film are seen to exist. We don't know their stories.

Akerman alternates between existence in public spaces and in private spaces. She alternates day and night. And she alternates static shots with moving shots - but not just any old travelling shots.

Akerman moves her camera along rows of people, along paths and lines. Her purpose is not narrative. If, for example, people are lined up waiting for a bus, then to travel along the line is not about narrative, though time and space are conflated - to wait is to be in a physical relationship with a row of others. To travel along that row of bodies is to discover the time invested. In other words, it is a narrative about waiting, a narrative we know that is about waiting for regime change, about ends of worlds, about existential uncertainty.

I suspect these sequences are haunted by the European memory of lines of people, not knowing where they are going, at the mercy of system that may have a final solution in mind. Railways can never be neutral in the European imagination, especially the imagination of a person whose mother was an Auschwitz survivor.

What is extraordinary about Akerman's travelling shots is that they do not lead to a reveal (the term is used by film folk to talk about a moment of discovery for the audience). Hollywood, with its concern with obstacles and the overcoming of obstacles seems to me to structure all movement as a search and a revealing discovery, while Akerman never builds to climax, or pay off. The movements are very even, without accent, and do not have the feeling of a movement towards or away from anything. To predict when they will end is a fool's errand.

Akerman has said she shoots from moving cars - and that may be why the view perpendicular to the direction of travel is the invariable condition of her travelling shots in D'est. But associations spring to mind for such shooting.

I think of tableau vivant, which describes a group of often costumed actors or models, posed and often theatrically lit. These figures do not speak or move. The set up is a collision of the stage and painting or photography. In this way, D'est can be seen as a reversion to the primitive and essential condition of cinema before film was invented.

I am also reminded of religious paintings and frescos in which the image must be read from left to right or right to left to produce a chronology of, say, a saintly life. Events are simultaneously represented and yet they are intended to be experienced sequentially, not as a series of discrete images and moments, but as an emotional journey through a familiar set of incarnations. The bodily movement required of the spectator is critical (a crab wise shimmy) - which, to me, is evoked when watching the moving shots in D'est - a sense of traversing.

A traverse - not the most familiar camera movement in film history. To traverse means to go sideways, not to confront ,or take control of, not to penetrate, not to withdraw. To traverse is to allow, to accept, to tolerate. To traverse is to move around the body of something that must be respected, that is not exactly a barrier but is not invaded. I like this move because it is - to veer into the metaphorical - feminine. It is as if clinging to something vast and unknowable, not to an object but to a feeling. There is always more...

No-one who appears in the shot is privileged, no-one in particular is picked out - all are equal, all are deserving, all are as real as any other. All are deserving of pity as any other. To put it another way - the movement, the film-making is democratic. When a cut to another shot comes, there is no correct moment to do that, though it always feels right in hindsight that a change has come. For D'est, Akerman was working with editors Claire Atherton and Agnés Bruckert. Every decision is the right one, and that in itself deserves attention.

It is a miracle of Akerman's films generally that she has never made an error of judgement about duration of shots or scenes. She may test patience and endurance but hind-sight always vindicates the decisions. Other film-makers may work with long, sustained shots, but as I see it, they are led by action that they have carefully designed, and carefully follow. Their purpose is narrative or expositional. They do not have such a subtle interest in the status of the film image itself and the structuring of experience. Nor does it seem relevant to me that others have made work in which every single shot is of great duration and which offers almost no overt narrative material (a recent favourite of mine is Unser täglich Brot by Nikolaus Geyrhalter), for this is not to work structurally but to embrace a certain aesthetic manner - which is a matter of tone not tune.

To go back to Astaire: he danced and his dance structured the world of Top Hat; Akerman structures the world and that is her dance.

D'est plays in the A Nos Amours Chantal Akerman retrospective at ICA London on 22nd January at 7pm.

Adam Roberts
www.anosamours.co.uk

‘Emmerdale' Actress Emma Atkins Reveals Pregnancy As Character Charity Is Jailed (PICS)

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‘Emmerdale’ viewers were left stunned on Tuesday night when Emma Atkin’s character Charity was jailed, and the actress has now explained why she's taking a break from the soap - she’s expecting a baby.

The actress shares the happy news in a video on the ITV website, in which she admits: “I do have a mixture of emotions going around because obviously I'm leaving for a while.”

emma atkins
Emma Atkins


A number of ‘Emmerdale’ stars have rushed to congratulate the actress, including Charley Webb, who plays her on-screen daughter Debbie Dingle.




However, while Charity has been jailed for two years for perverting the courts of justice, Emma has hinted that she won’t serve her full sentence.

“I am leaving probably for about a year because I'm leaving to have a baby which is really exciting,” Emma continues. “I will miss ‘Emmerdale’ so much but it is a new little journey in my life that I'm taking on now.

“I can't wait to come back - hopefully within a year.”

Charity’s trial has dominated the soap in recent weeks, but there are plenty of other juicy storylines brewing and Cain Dingle is currently struggling to deal with a recent health diagnosis.



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Watch The Moment Jeremy Kyle Was Pepper-Sprayed In Magaluf As He Tackles Young Drinkers For 'The Kyle Files'

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The dramatic moment Jeremy Kyle was pepper-sprayed in Magaluf is to be shown in full on ITV tonight.

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Meet The Bouncer Who Pepper-Sprayed Jeremy Kyle, And Read His Explanation Of Events

The controversial chat show host was sprayed while he was filming an episode of his series 'The Kyle Files' in the Majorcan resort focusing on the impact drinking is having on the lives of young people.

The footage reveals Jeremy in the street, coughing and with his eyes streaming, until he is bundled into a car by security.

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Jeremy Kyle seconds after he was pepper-sprayed filming on location in Magaluf on the Spanish island of Majorca


Jeremy says: "Walking down the street I think somebody sprayed pepper spray - it’s serious. Throat, eyes, coughing.

“We came here to talk about a drinking culture - lots of kids seemingly having fun. You get pepper spray sprayed in your face, just walking down the street. Okay, is that the camera? Is that because we’re trying to find out what its really like or does that happen every night If you get into an argument?”

The incident happened while Jeremy was part of a crowd walking down the strip in Magaluf trying to find out what a Friday night was really like there for those frequenting the bars and clubs along it. He suffered no injuries as a result.

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Jeremy Kyle suffered a sore throat and streaming eyes as the pepper took its effect


Elsewhere in the episode, Jeremy speaks to police and ambulance services who clear up the aftermath of nights out in the UK, and uses undercover reporters to find out how straightforward it is to get served underage before confronting staff at the bars they go into with his evidence.

Other issues Jeremy tackles in the series include legal highs, knife crime, fake and dangerous goods, the cosmetic surgery industry, and the questionable methods used to get people to part with their money.

The latest episode of the series, Young Drinkers, features the pepper-spray incident and airs on ITV at 7.30pm tonight.



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Jennifer Lopez: ‘Just Because I'm A Mum Doesn't Mean I Can't Be Sexy'

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'Star Trek 3': Simon Pegg To Co-Write New Film With Doug Jung

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Movie mega-geek Simon Pegg has reportedly been awarded the honour of co-authoring the next 'Star Trek' film.

In addition to reprising his role as Scotty, Simon will pen the next installment of the sci-fi franchise alongside 'Dark Blue' co-creator Doug Jung, reports Deadline.

The news comes shortly after the announcement of 'Fast And Furious 6' director Justin Lin taking JJ Abrams' place, with Pegg and Jung being drafted to fill ex-writer Roberto Orci's shoes.

star trek
Zachary Quinto, JJ Abrams, Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, Simon Pegg, John Cho and Chris Pine


Fans will be holding high hopes for Simon's screenplay, expecting it to be akin to films he previously penned, such as 'Shaun Of The Dead' or 'The World's End'.

Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Anton Yelchin, Karl Urban, John Cho and Zoe Saldana are expected to continue their roles as the crew of the USS Enterprise, while former director JJ Abrams will be listed as a producer this time around, due to his 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' commitments.

'Star Trek 3' is scheduled for release on 8 July 2016, to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the franchise.



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Rubens Exhibition at Royal Academy Is Very Light on Works from, Well, Rubens

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If you are planning to visit the new Rubens and His Legacy exhibition at the Royal Academy, be warned now - there are very few paintings from Rubens on show. Instead this exhibition looks to examine the influence and legacy of this great painter on artists from the period right up to the present day.

The name 'Rubens' may be in the title of the exhibition but I counted maybe only about a dozen works from Rubens actually on show. Maybe a few more. What few Rubens works there are though are incredibly impressive.

Tiger, Lion and Leopard Hunt is an extraordinary piece of work. The piece is full of energy and dynamism as the animals and hunters launch at each other with ferocity - the ultimate battle for survival between these two packs of hunters. There is such a strong sense of chaos, fear and violence in the picture. It's phenomenal.

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And like all the Rubens works on show, it is hung in a room filled with paintings from other artists on a similar theme - here, Delacroix and Landseer. Though interesting, the other works seem limp by comparison. Maybe that was intentional - putting all the flattery on Rubens - but it does make for a muddling quality of works for an exhibition.

That gulf is particularly acute in the section that looks at Rubens' portraits. One of my favourites, the towering portrait of Maria Grimaldi and Her Dwarf is full of contrasts - the aristocratic woman looks so rested, so wealthy, and her skin peachy and glowing compared to the haggard lines and red eyes of her exhausted servant.

But the portraits from Sir Joshua Reynolds that surround it aren't anywhere near as engaging. The focus of this section is meant to be 'Elegance' (the exhibition is hung thematically) but that's such a generic term - after all, there was plenty of elegant portraits in the RA's own Moroni exhibition from last year. And the impact just seems to make you wistful for the Rembrandt exhibition at the National Gallery, where the portraits were extraordinary.

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And then there is the absence of key works.

The Fall of the Damned is referenced heavily in the exhibition, and indeed there is one preparatory sketch for this awesome piece of work in the galleries. And the drawing is wonderful. A waterfall, a rushing flood, of tangled, heaving bodies tumble across the page. A terrifying scene of terrified faces trying to escape the eternal fire.

It's a stunning piece of work and it has evidently been a huge influence on Jan Boeckhorst and Pieter Claesz Soutman, whose own works hang nearby. Given the focus on the legacy of this seminal painting from Rubens, it's a shame the original wasn't released for inclusion in the show.

Certainly the overall impression is that the content of the exhibition has been spread very thin - making the most of what seems to be a very small pool of Rubens' works released for this show.

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Which may explain the rather unexpected and surprising room of contemporary art curated by Jenny Saville that is included. Not a single Rubens in the room - instead work from Picasso to Cecily Brown, from Cy Twombly to Lucian Freud, have been brought together on the premise that they have been influenced by Rubens in some way.

Now, I loved this room. I thought it was bold and exciting. The question is, what does a De Kooning, some Picassos and an Andy Warhol have to do with Rubens? The answer, I feel, is not a lot.

The Andy Warhol of Jackie Kennedy is there, I think, as a representative of some modern Pieta, but Rubens didn't create the Pieta. Nor did he create the nude and few of the nudes in the room were particularly Rubenesque.

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Rubens' nudes were fleshy, passive, idealised creatures with perfect shimmering complexions and pert breasts. That depiction is about as far away as you can get from Jenny Saville's and Lucien Freud's nudes so again, I wasn't really sure on the link - unless these were to be seen as deliberate rejections o this form of nude..

A notable exception was the stunning new work from Jenny Saville herself that is on show in the room. Two heads sit on top of a mass of intertwined thrusting bodies, a depiction that reminded me of Fall of the Damned, but that only in turn again emphasised the loss of not actually having that great Rubens painting on show.

And all of this leads me to my main conundrum.

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Did I actually enjoy the exhibition? Well yes, in as much as I would enjoy walking through the rooms of any major art gallery which has its walls covered with Cezannes, Picassos, Renoirs, Turners, Van Dycks, Constables, Freuds, a couple of Warhols and Bacons, and a few Rubens thrown in for good measure. But as a cohesive, coherent exhibition on Rubens, I'm not sure this exhibition made its point.

It's worth the price of admission just to see those few Rubens paintings on show. It's just a shame there weren't more of them.

Image Credits:

1. Peter Paul Rubens Tiger, Lion and Leopard Hunt, 1616 Oil on canvas, 256 x 324.5 cm Rennes, Musee des Beaux Arts Photo c. MBA, Rennes, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Adelaide Beaudoin

2. Peter Paul Rubens Pan and Syrinx, 1617 Oil on panel, 40 x 61 cm Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Gemaeldegalerie Alte Meister, Kassel Photo: Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel, Gemaeldegalerie Alte Meister/Ute Brunzel

3. Peter Paul Rubens The Garden of Love, c. 1633 Oil on canvas, 199 x 286 cm Museo Nacional del Prado. Madrid Photo c. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado

4. Paul Cezanne Three Bathers, c. 1875 Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 33 cm Private Collection Photo: Ali Elai, Camerarts

5. Peter Paul Rubens The Triumph of Henri IV, 1630 Oil on panel, 49.5 x 83.5 cm Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1942 (42.187) Photo c. 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art / Art Resource / Scala, Florence

6. Sir Anthony Van Dyck A Genoese Noblewoman and Her Son, c. 1626 Oil on canvas, 191.5 x 139.5 cm National Gallery of Art, Washington, Widener Collection, 1942.9.91 Photo Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington

Walking on the Beach Imitating Sand

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Step inside London's Hus Gallery and you become immersed in an imaginary, timeless and ethereal setting created by two young sculptors, Virgile Ittah and Kai Yoda. Immersed and integral too, since the viewer is seen by the artists as part of this mood piece.

Entitled "Walking on the Beach Imitating Sand", it's a personal expression of the struggle for national and cultural identity in a world in which the migration of people throughout the world has become a source of much current political debate.

Ittah was a finalist in last year's Catlin Prize and is developing a growing reputation for sculpting in her trademark wax. Themes of cultural displacement, isolation and the search for identity have been recurrent themes in her work.

Ittah was born and raised in France of Jewish North African descent. Her father and grandmother were born in Morocco, and historically, that side of the family has moved through a variety of countries in the Mediterranean region.

Her artistic themes have been accentuated over the past two years since she met Kai Yoda, a sculptor born in Tokyo to a Japanese father and Swedish mother. Both artists share a mutual understanding not only of the benefits of their mixed ethnicity but also of the constant flux, a sense of cultural dislocation and insecurity.

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In the foreground (above), semi-figurative wax sculptures are hunched between small round "islands" built from coloured sand and silicone.

To the right, hangs a Yoda mobile comprising a balance-scale in which two similar-sized silicone cylinders suspended at unequal levels by a single piece of rope.

Beyond, behind a gauze-like linen curtain bathed in soft-light, stands a life-size neo-classical wax statue of a man.

"The concept is not only physical," says Ittah. It can just be a feeling, and what we try to do through our work and installation is to re-create a feeling of homeland."

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Though Ittah's sculptures dominate, Yoda's influence is strong. For example, Ittah's iridescent wax "creatures" as she calls them (above) are sculpted in a free way, without the constant re-working that is her normal method. It's another example of this "in-betweenness" theme and also in harmony with Japanese philosophy.

"Within their culture is a lot about control and the Japanese try to deal with nature as it is and not try to confront it or to fight it but just to deal with it. And I think it's very Japanese to have a notion of acceptance and resilience."

Yet though the setting seems to ooze comfort and peace, the biographical resonances of the artists' sense of cultural limbo predominate.

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Ittah's main statue (above) is not fixed to the ground but in a seeming state of temporality.

The bright colours are references to the radiation that leaked from the Fukushima nuclear reactor in 2011 that increased the fears of a Japanese nation already feeling insecure about nature because of the country's propensity to earthquakes. The islands of Ittah and Yoda's installation appear almost to be moveable, the linen curtain moves and flutters - symbolic instability is at the core.

One end of Yoda's rope is broken - a symbol of the cutting of ties both emotional and physical. "It could be like a force for creation and a force for destruction too," says Yoda. "A pushing and pulling thing."

This also reflects their relationship. The couple admit to be being very different personalities; she expressive and taking the initiative, he passive and reactive. Yin and Yang. They even work on projects at different times of the day. Yoda has also experienced personal push and pull as a result of his mixed ethnicity from a young age.

In his early education in Japan at a western-run school, he was taught self-expression. When he entered the Japanese system, this was discouraged. His work as an interpreter too has highlighted differing attitudes between east and west.

One might imagine that the current troubles that have beset her native France in recent days, particularly among French Jewry, might increase any sense of insecurity Virgile Ittah might have. Yet she says no.

"This constant shifting is becoming a reality for many people around the globe. I feel the recent events in France is a violent reaction against this mixing of identities because they feel threatened. Yet for me the mixed identity is the future. I'm optimistic."

Yet, to Kai Yoda, what insecurity they do have, has proved a force for creativity.

"It's quite fascinating that both of us make so much work and have lived in so many places but we are so insecure," says Yoda. "We always have this need to be making something more because of this insecurity and that is something very fascinating for me because now I have somebody next to me who is insecure as well and ...we always want to be grounded but we are constantly failing."

Walking on the Beach Imitating Sand is showing at the Hus Gallery, 10 Hanover Street, London W1S 1YQ until 21 February.

All images are used with the permission of the artists, the gallery and photographer Peter Mallett.

Man Arrested For Leaking Madonna's 'Rebel Heart' Album Demos, 'Vogue' Singer Thanks FBI In Statement

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A man accused of hacking into Madonna’s computer and leaking demos from her forthcoming album, ‘Rebel Heart’, has been arrested.

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Madonna has since thanked the Israeli police and FBI, who were behind the arrest, with a statement on her Facebook page.

The ‘Living For Love’ singer writes: “I am profoundly grateful to the FBI, the Israeli Police investigators and anyone else who helped lead to the arrest of this hacker.

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Madonna


“I deeply appreciate my fans who have provided us with pertinent information and continue to do so regarding leaks of my music.

“Like any citizen, I have the right to privacy. This invasion into my life - creatively, professionally, and personally remains a deeply devastating and hurtful experience, as it must be for all artists who are victims of this type of crime.”


In 2011, a Madonna fan was charged and subsequently released for leaking a demo version of her single, ‘Give Me All Your Luvin’.

Last month, over a dozen unfinished demos were stolen from Madonna’s computer and shared online, and came under fire when she compared the leak to “artistic rape” on her Instagram page.

The end of Privacy is not something any of us are ready for! #livingforlove

Фото опубликовано Madonna (@madonna)




Madonna’s new album ‘Rebel Heart’ will be released in March, and will contain collaborations with Nicki Minaj, Kanye West and - most bizarrely of all - Mike Tyson, who features on a track called ‘Iconic’.

It sounds like she’s pulling out all the stops to ensure the new release is a hit, and will be promoting it with a performance at the Grammys next month, as well as a rumoured appearance at the Brit awards - which would mark her first performance at the awards bash in 20 years.

Listen to her new single, 'Living For Love', below...





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'Fifty Shades Of Grey': Unseen Clips Of Jamie Dornan, Dakota Johnson In Ellie Goulding's Video For 'Love Me Like You Do'

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The many fans of ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ who are literally holding their breath until the release of the film next month, will be able to feast on these fresh unseen clips, courtesy of the new video from Ellie Goulding.

The British songstress’s new track ‘Love Me Like You Do’ has been written specifically for the film, and the video has some fresh, tantalising glimpses of ingenue Anastasia Steele (Dakota Johnson) and her first encounter with the enigmatic Christian Grey (Jamie Dornan).

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Christian Grey (Jamie Dornan) and Anastasia Steele (Dakota Johnson) get intimate in Ellie Goulding's video


The clips in the video also reveal some tidbits about the development in their relationship, from tender courtship moments by the lake, to Anastasia’s introduction to Christian’s very private world, aka The Red Room of Pain.

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A tender moment for the pair, before Christian's other world is revealed


The single will be released on 15 February, one day after the release of the highly-anticipated film. The full soundtrack is being released on 10 February.

'Fifty Shades of Grey' will be in UK cinemas from Valentine's Day, 14 February. Watch the trailer below...



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Sam Smith Relationship Split? ‘Stay With Me' Singer Hints At Break-Up After Cryptic Instagram Post (PIC)

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Sam Smith has spent much of January spending time with his new boyfriend, Jonathan Zeizel, though it seems their relationship has already come to an end.

Sam and Jonathan went public with their relationship just weeks ago, but the ‘Stay With Me’ singer has dropped some serious hints that it’s now all over.




Sam took to Instagram on Wednesday night, sharing a selfie of himself looking rather unhappy and clutching a glass of wine.

“Sometimes you just need to lay in bed with a glass of red wine and a football T shirt and listen to Joni Mitchell,” the caption reads. “It's been a sad day. Beautiful show, but sad day x.”

According to reports, Sam also hinted at a break-up during his Toronto concert on the same night.

While introducing ‘Like I Can’, Sam told the audience: “This is about a very similar thing I had to do today with someone I've been seeing.”

A photo posted by Jongo (@kidjongo) on




In December, Sam hinted that he was in a relationship, though the couple chose to wait until after Christmas to go public.

He told The Sun: “It's very early days. I'm talking very, very, very early days.

“It's a surreal thing to be talking about because I haven't even confirmed with him that we're officially seeing each other.”




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Tina Malone To Undergo Surgery To Remove 12lbs Of Excess Skin (And It'll All Be Caught On Camera)

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Tina Malone has never made any secret of the fact that she wants to go under the knife to get rid of the excess skin on her body after she lost more than 11 stone, and as this is showbizland, it’s all going to be caught on camera.

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A new TLC documentary will follow the ‘Shameless’ actress as she embarks on an extreme medical makeover.

She will undergo a number of cosmetic surgical procedures to remove 12lbs of excess skin on her eyes, face, neck, stomach, breasts, arms and thighs.

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Tina Malone will undergo extensive surgery to remove the excess skin from her body, face and neck


According to the official blurb, the documentary ‘will take viewers on Tina’s medical and emotional journey as she undergoes a quick succession of surgeries that will transform her body. Cameras will roll through the consultations, operations, recovery and will follow her home to husband Paul and baby Flame where we’ll see the reaction from friends and family.’

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Tina, 52, has admitted that she spent most of her adult life feeling miserable because of her weight.

In 2010 she had a gastric band fitted which helped her drop from a size 26 to a size eight and shortly afterwards Tina and her husband Paul had a baby daughter.

But the star has admitted that her excessively saggy skin means she can’t be free from the burden of her unhappy past, which weighs heavily on her mind.

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“People often say they are fat and happy, but I know they’re lying,” Tina explained. “I've been the fat bird with the diabetes and the breathlessness, and it's no fun”

“I’ve lost 11 stone 4 pounds thanks to my gastric band but I’ve gained a tummy I can flop on the table and have to tuck into my knickers.

“However hard I work out I’ll never get rid of it and I can’t bear to carry it around with me any longer. I need to end the fat chapter of my life and at 52 years old I want to finally be able to look in the mirror and like what I see. This surgery will give me all of that and I can’t wait.”

Good luck Tina!

The 1-hour documentary will air on TLC in mid-2015.



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Josie Cunningham: Will NHS Boob Job Mum Live Up To Being 'The Most Hated Woman In Britain'?

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Since erupting into the public consciousness two years ago by flaunting her NHS-funded breast enlargement, Josie Cunningham has refused to go away.

Having informed doctors her flat chest was "ruining her life", Cunningham’s glamour modeling dream seemed a reality after the taxpayer very generously upped her from a 32A to a 36DD.

Since then Cunningham has more or less kept herself in the limelight by boasting a litany of tax-payer funded handouts, becoming pregnant for a third time while admitting she was unsure who the father was, publicly pondering an abortion, admitting to smoking and drinking throughout and selling tickets for the birth of her baby.

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Josie Cunningham appearing on This Morning on Thursday


On Thursday she will feature in a Channel 4 documentary asking if she is indeed, the Most Hated Woman In Britain.

Speaking on ITV's This Morning, Cunningham denied accusations that she is a scrounger and said she has been working since she was a teenager. (NB: Last year she tweeted to her 81,000 followers: 'Sticks and stones may break my bones, but tax payers will always fund me :)')



"I'm far from a scrounger. I've worked from being 16-years-old and I'm self-employed at the moment. For the time being I'm making a steady career. I'm excited to see what the future holds," she said.

Cunningham, who binged on alcohol and cigarettes after feeling “disappointed” to learn the sex of her baby, and even mused on aborting her child in order to appear on Channel 5's Celebrity Big Brother, added: "I did consider having an abortion with my third child, which I am ashamed to say. The way I saw it was that I'd rather be able to provide further for the two children I already had than not be able to provide for all three.

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Cunningham insists she is no scrounger and is simply doing her best for her children


"It wasn't an easy decision. But now I am anti-abortion, I came close to making the biggest mistake of my life."

Previously the mother-of-three had said that she would pay back the cost of the enlargement operation to the NHS, (having bizarrely threatened to sue the NHS for making them 'too big') but on Thursday she said: "I did say I'd pay it back but after all the flak I've been receiving, I soon decided that whether I pay it back or not, I'm still going to get stick. I'm still criticised heavily.

"I'm not expecting a pat on the back, but I want people to see the contrast of my lifestyle, which is a very hard-working lone parent. I'm just trying to make ends meet."

Cunningham has boasted of receiving £1,500 of Botox injections to treat excessive sweating and £2,500 of dental treatment – also on the NHS.

She was also claiming £6,000 a year in council-funded taxi rides because public transport gave her panic attacks.

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Josie Cunningham had a £4,800 breast enlargement operation on the NHS







'Fifty Shades Of Grey' Actor Jamie Dornan Admits He's Worried About People Seeing His Sex Face In New Film

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Jamie Dornan has revealed what he's most nervous about, ahead of ‘Fifty Shades Of Grey’ cinema release next month.

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Is it the the thought of the whole world queueing up to catch him in the buff? The idea that audiences will be heading to the cinema in their hoards to watch him brandishing a riding crop? The fact that he’s about to appear in a film adaptation of one of the most-panned books in history?

Er, no actually. It turns out he’s more worried that everyone is going to see his sex face.

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Jamie Dornan


Speaking to Variety, he explained that it was “the worst thing imaginable”, adding: “For all the reasons anyone would think, most people would like to keep their sex face private. The idea of a million people seeing that! I hope it happens quite fast.”

The original ‘Fifty Shades’ novel was famed for its sexually explicit content, with protagonist Anastasia Steele, played in the forthcoming film by Dakota Johnson, finding her whole world turned upside down when she meets S&M-obsessed tycoon Christian Grey.

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Jamie Dornan and Dakota Johnson in action


Jamie, who plays Christian, also told the magazine about the “modesty pouch” he used while filming the many sex scenes ‘Fifty Shades’ demanded.

He joked: “It's like one of those little satchels that Robin Hood or someone of that era would have tied onto his belt.

“There's no back. It's tiny. I mean, it's not tiny! Because it's got to hold a lot.”


Sadly for anyone hoping to find out the contents of Jamie’s pouch, he's previously said that there won’t be any full-frontal nudity in the film.

‘Fifty Shades Of Grey’ hits UK cinemas on 14 February. Watch the trailer below...



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'Cucumber' Creator Russell T Davies Complains About How Gay Characters Are Represented In TV Drama

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Russell T Davies has criticised British TV drama for their depiction of gay characters, complaining that their sexuality is always used as a plot device.

With his brand new series ‘Cucumber’ about a gay, middle-aged couple debuting on Channel 4 this evening, Russell tells HuffPostUK:

“The bedrock of soaps has been magnificent but, if you remove the soaps, gay people in drama always seem to be driving the plot, whether it’s the secret of their gayness, or their great, big coming out, it’s never just incidental.”

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Freddie Fox and Vincent Franklin are two of the stars in Russell T Davies' 'Cucumber'


This isn’t an accusation you could throw at the latest offering from Russell, who previously brought us ‘Queer as Folk’, rebooted ‘Doctor Who’ and turned David Tennant into a cheeky, modernistic Casanova.

While ‘Cucumber’ is, at first look, a simple, contemporary drama about a frustrated couple, Russell has once again thrown away the rule book, by making it about Henry and Lance, looking for sexual adventure as they face their middle age.

Meanwhile, ‘Banana’ is a series on E4 concentrating on ‘Cucumber’s periphery characters. And, just in case Russell got bored, ‘Tofu’ is a factual series about sex, based online.

And yes, if you’re thinking there’s a euphemism in there, you’d be right. Writer Russell T Davies calls ‘Cucumber’ “hard in many ways, including a hard stare at real life”.

But, between the sniggers, Russell is passionate about painting a realistic portrait of gay men in the 21st century, to help us all understand “why men do the things they do”.

Russell T is a great giggler, but there’s no mistaking the passion, or the scale of his intent.

“I don’t want to get on my soapbox, it’s a serious pursuit, but it won’t do any good if the show isn’t entertaining.

“My hope is viewers will have a good time as well as learn.”

These ideas have been simmering inside Russell for over a decade, a time during which, as he describes it, he was “delightfully sidetracked by Doctor Who. So I’m a bit late coming to the party".

In that time, he acknowledges, the gay landscape has shifted, up to and including society’s embrace of gay marriage. Russell says now in wonder, “We grew older. The world grew and changed and expanded.

“Other people have been fighting that huge battle for equality, that story’s written.

“Now it’s time to fine out who we really are - and catch up on the rest of the world by a few thousand years.”

During his time on Doctor Who, Russell also presided over a fantastical empire of ‘Torchwood’ and ‘The Sarah Jane Adventures’ so the multi-layered creativity of ‘Cucumber’, ‘Banana’ and ‘Tofu’ is nothing new.

“I genuinely loved generating all that stuff,” he says, “I just feel now it’s time to bring the same creative energy into the real world."

However, if he’s happy to take on taboo subjects one at a time, there’s one challenge bemusing Russell that he managed to avoid in all that Tardis time, and that’s the omnipresence of a mobile phone.

“It’s like having another person in the scene the whole time,” he ponders about other 21st century phenomenon.

“And it’s not credible to have characters who don’t have phones on them. So, in theory, every character I write about now has to be accessible to other people all the time, which is pretty extraordinary.”

'Cucumber' debuts tonight on Channel 4 at 9pm. Banana airs at 10pm on E4 and Tofu via the Channel 4 website (www.channel4.com/ondemand) at 10.30pm Pictures below...



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Celebrities Who've Lied About Their Age: From ‘Coronation Street' Stars To James Blunt And Nadine Coyle (PICS)

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In the world of showbiz, things aren’t always as they seem and sometimes, celebs are responsible for telling a few fibs, including the old classic - lying about their age.

In January 2015, actress Katie Redford was caught telling fibs, when it was revealed that she was 25, not 19 as she had claimed to be during her 'Corrie' audition.

While Katie's lie was discovered by eagle-eyed fans, plenty of stars have managed to keep their real age a secret, revealing it later in life when they decide the game's up or, in the case of James Blunt, when their passport features in a music vid. Whoops.

However, while most stars are guilty of shaving a few years off their total, a small handful actually increased the number.

Find out who in the slideshow below...



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Why I Think Kim Kardashian Is a Genius

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With an estimated net worth topping £41 million, it boggles the mind how someone with no discernible talents has managed to keep her grip on fame and fortune quite as much as Kim Kardashian. Despite a killer wardrobe and enviable good looks, it's hard to see exactly what it is that she adds to society.

Did she cure an unknown disease? No. Did she take a stand against one of the many social issues that affect women? No. Maybe she voiced an opinion about the current global warming debate... nope, wrong again.

Other than being an overrated clothes horse, it's hard to see the value added when it comes to Kim K. However despite all the arguments against the all-encompassing Kardashian brand, you can't help but secretly admire her business acumen. With the help of Momager (a term coined by Kris Jenner herself), Kim has managed to align herself with every brand, cause and marketable idea going. As I attended this year's National Television Awards and was forced to watch as Momager herself Kris bundled her way through presenting an award, it was a prime example of style without substance, especially considering the fat cheque she no doubt collected for services rendered.

Like mother like daughter, if it's profitable, she will pout and sign on the dotted line. Of course she's laughing all the way to the bank, literally skipping there in her five inch, custom made, rare animal skin Louboutins.

Now as much as I'd like to place all the blame at Kim K's well pedicured feet, it must be said that the fault does not entirely lie with her. Unfortunately Kim is only the result of society's obsession with appearance, materialism and all that sparkles and shines on the surface, because mark my words if Kim didn't have a face that could launch a thousand ships, we wouldn't be remotely interested in what she ate for breakfast.

The media constantly bombard us with images and stories about these pretty young women, who are doing the most absurdly controversial things. Reinforcing the stereotype that as long as you're good looking there's no need to engage your brain and despite the fact that Kim is mostly portrayed as a monosyllabic Barbie doll, she must in fact be highly intelligent and a very shrewd business woman to be able to remain so high in the public's consciousness even when she's having something as inane as a bad hair day.

The worrying thing is that it is the generation behind me who are paying the price, growing up with roles models such as the Geordie Shore and Towie cast and aspiring to be nothing but rich, slim and pretty. These women have a lot more going for them but unfortunately that doesn't make for good entertainment. A perfect example of this is the case of Josie Cunningham, who courts controversy at every turn, the more outrageous she acts, the more publicity she receives. What are young girls meant to think when they are repeatedly faced with representations of women who acquire notoriety from such scandalous behaviour. Many young girls today aim for nothing more than to marry a footballer and become rich and famous, in a many cases, at any means necessary. The portrayal of unrealistic body images such as Kim K's is also another issue that is highly detrimental to the positive and healthy images we want our young girls to have. I hav sometimes caught myself looking in the mirror, in judgement at what I've kindly been told is a perfectly pert bum. Resorting to giving myself a verbal telling off, as it wasn't that long ago I thought it was too big and moved heaven and earth to shed the extra 2 stone. Most women have body issues and unfortunately probably always will, but continually staring at something so unattainable cannot be healthy.

It's about time that the media are held accountable for the role they have played in pulling women back to the dark ages, where we were thought of as nothing more than empty headed, sexualised vessels. It's important that these outlets recognise the social pandemic they are creating and begin promoting role models more responsibly. Women have made strides in business and society, we are wives, we are mothers, we are entrepreneurs and leaders in business and society. There should be much more of these figureheads, epitomising the modern day woman, taking centre stage in the media and being held up as a beacon to both men and women coming up behind them - even if they happen to be immaculately dressed while doing so.


Lauren Riley is a former Apprentice star and founder of the new age legal app 'The Link App.' Follow her on twitter @misslaurenriley and http://www.thelinkapp.co.uk/

‘EastEnders: Back To Ours': Pam St. Clement And Barbara Windsor To Appear In Online Mini-Series (PICS)

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‘EastEnders’ bosses have revealed more details about their upcoming online mini-series, ‘EastEnders: Back To Ours’, confirming that Barbara Windsor and Pam St. Clement will star in one episode.

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The nostalgic show will see some of the soap’s most famous stars looking back on their time in Albert Square, remembering their iconic moments, and unforgettable storylines.

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Their characters are two of soapland's most memorable women


The iPlayer-only series launches on Tuesday 27 January, and the actresses have shared their joy at taking part in the project.

“What fun - not only catching up and chatting with Babs but being surrounded by friends and crew from the EastEnders production team - it was like coming home,” Pam states.

“I had such great fun filming this with Pam,” adds Barbara. “At times we completely forgot we were being filmed and we got terribly carried away, in fact we got quite outrageous!

“It was such a lovely afternoon, we giggled for hours in fact we didn’t want it to finish.”

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Pam and Barbara


Other stars confirmed as taking part are Adam Woodyatt and Laurie Brett, who play Ian and Jane Beale, and Shane Richie and Jessie Wallace.

The show is part of the build-up to the soap’s 30th anniversary, which is being commemorated with a special live week.

On Thursday 19 February, the cast - including Barbara! - will star in a live episode, during which fans will finally find out who killed Lucy Beale.

There will also be a flashback episode, explaining everything that happened on the night Lucy died.



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