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Monday, 16 May 2016

Newcastle Knights investigate allegations Dane Gagai was racially abused by fan at Hunter Stadium

DANE Gagai was allegedly racially abused on the day his grandmother passed away in an ugly aftermath to the NRL’s Indigenous Round.
Newcastle are investigating claims Gagai was the target of a racial taunt when he broke down in tears at the end of Sunday’s humiliating 62-0 thrashing by Cronulla.
In a disturbing end to the NRL’s Indigenous round, former NRL player turned boxer Joe Williams expressed his outrage over allegations Gagai was called a “sooky black c ...” by a member of the crowd.



Williams claimed the incident happened when an emotional Gagai was being consoled by teammate Tariq Sims at the end of the match after Gagai reportedly lost his grandmother earlier that day.
Newcastle chief executive Matt Gidley said that the club had reported the allegations to the NRL’s integrity unit and there would be a full investigation.
“The club has been made aware of the allegations and we are taking them seriously,” Gidley said.
“Until such time as we establish the facts around this matter we can’t make any further comment.”
It is understood Gagai did not hear the comments at the time but has asked the club to look into the incident.

Friday, 23 May 2014

‘The Devil Wears Prada’ Turns Ten: Talking With Costumer Patricia Field




This June marks the tenth anniversary of the release of one of the most discussed and successful fashion films in recent memory, “The Devil Wears Prada.” The woman behind the clothes that made the movie the blockbuster it was, Patricia Field, was subsequently nominated for an Oscar and adds the film to her lengthy “Sex and the City” résumé.

Field, 75, currently works on TV Land’s “Younger.” She chatted with WWD about all that’s changed in the industry since “Prada” was released — and, for good measure, what it was like dressing Meryl.

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

SUNY Cortland alum Kevin James returning to TV on new CBS sitcom




SUNY Cortland alumnus Kevin James is returning to television.

Deadline reports CBS has picked up the 51-year-old actor's new show, "Kevin Can Wait," to series for the 2016-17 TV season. James will star on the multi-camera sitcom as a newly retired police officer facing tougher challenges at home with his wife and three kids.

The cast includes Erinn Hayes, Taylor Spreitler, Mary-Charles Jones, James Digiacomo, Ryan Cartwright, Leonard Earl Howze, Lenny Venito and Gary Valentine.

James previously rose to fame on the network's "The King of Queens," which aired from 1998 to 2007. He was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series in 2006.

The comedian and actor attended the State University of New York at Cortland in the mid '80s, playing football and majoring in sports management, but did not graduate. In addition to TV, he's also starred in movies like "Hitch," "Grown-Ups," and "Paul Blart: Mall Cop," voiced animated characters in "Barnyard" and "Hotel Transylvania," and had a Comedy Central special "Sweat the Small Stuff."

James' upcoming films include the action-comedy "The True Memoirs of an International Assassin" and "44," based on the true story of a 44-year-old man who returned to school to achieve his dream of playing college football at Lambuth University.

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Michelle Obama Wears Narciso Rodriguez in Buenos Aires



First lady Michelle Obama wore a Narciso Rodriguez purple and amber mineral-dye printed dress on her arrival to Buenos Aires today. The Obamas have touched down in Argentina following their trip to Cuba.

The family landed in Buenos Aires shortly after 1 a.m. and were met by Argentina’s foreign minister, Susana Malcorra, before being taken to the U.S. Ambassador’s residence.

The first lady will be meeting with students at the Metropolitan Design Center in Barracas at 9:30 a.m. as part of her Let Girls Learn program which she is promoting throughout the visit.

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Christina Aguilera Shows Off New Pierced Lavender Hair



Does “The Voice” have a quota for platinum-blonde pop stars?

On Monday night, the show’s season 10 judge Christina Aguilera edged away from her traditionally light locks and embraced a different color of the rainbow. While candy-colored hair and braids are very on-trend at the moment (at least among the festival-going set), she added an alt-angle to her new lavender hue, accessorizing a single front braid with a cascading row of piercing-style hoops. Hairstylist Chris Appleton showed off his work on Instagram with a detail shot, and Aguilera’s makeup artist Etienne Ortega kept the look matchy-matchy, giving her a dark purple lip and lilac eyeliner.

Aguilera shares judging duties on the NBC competition show with Blake Shelton, Pharrell Williams and Adam Levine, and last night she also shared with a fellow blonde pop star. The show’s erstwhile judge Gwen Stefani and Shelton performed the debut of “Let Me Break Your Heart,” their new romantic duet. Stefani joined him on stage wearing a mesh floral fishtail gown by Australian designer Jamie Lee. The pop-punk is no stranger to mixing around her beauty look, either: in March she headed to Tokyo Fashion Week to promote her new album, performing with black dip-dyed hair on display.

Ariana Grande Is Gracious, Not ‘Greedy,’ on Funky New ‘Dangerous Woman’ Track




It’s been fewer than 24 hours since Ms. Dangerous Woman herself, Ariana Grande, released her new album’s most futuristic cut, “Everyday,” and already she’s back swinging with the funky new “Greedy.” Premiering moments ago on Beats 1, “Greedy” rides a groovy bass and a jangling tambourine with some singsong spoken outros for good measure. Stream it here. Dangerous Woman is out in seven days.

Saturday, 10 May 2014

What Will DJ Kylie Jenner Spin at Her First-Ever Gig?



Eighteen-year-old lip gloss pusher Kylie Jenner has added a résumé line that’s practically a prerequisite for young socialites and heiresses: DJ. Do socialites and heiresses need résumés? Not to DJ the SLS Las Vegas hotel’s Foxtail pool bar they don’t. The youngest Kardashian makes her debut May 29, although as MixMag points out, she’s already developed her skills by standing behind a DJ booth at a Coachella party.

In other Kylie news: she’s reportedly dumped boyfriend Tyga for good. (Delete his number, girl.) She was also recently featured on easily the worst song of 2016, this Burberry Perry x Lil Yachty x Kylie Jenner x Justine Skye x Jordyn Woods joint “Beautiful Day.” It’s an interpolation of the theme song to Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, it’s bad to start with, and then Jenner drops in and can’t keep a straight face for the one single line anybody even asked her to sing.

Wednesday, 7 May 2014

‘Outlander’ Season Two: Terry Dresbach Talks Costumes



Sawed-off mannequin breasts, dresses too big to fit inside trailers, 1940s Balenciaga inspirations — season two of the Starz cult hit “Outlander” has, in all ways, upped the ante. When the time-traveling drama returns to the network on Saturday, audiences who have been waiting since 2014 will be in for even more opulence: lead characters Claire and Jamie take 18th-century Paris. “Every would-be blank space has some gold hoo-hah on the wall,” says the show’s costume designer, Terry Dresbach. “They’re not known for minimalist.”

Season two, from the drama itself to the costumes, is “bigger in every conceivable way,” says Dresbach, who previously won an Emmy for her work on the 2003 HBO series “Carnivàle.” “Caitriona [Balfe, who plays Claire] and the other actresses could no longer get dressed in their trailers because they couldn’t fit through the doors. In 18th-century buildings, the doors weren’t really wide — and we didn’t make the dresses as wide as they actually would have been. Jamie [played by Sam Heughan] would’ve been standing 12 feet away from Claire and they would’ve been waving at each other.” Makeshift dressing rooms were installed in several of the period buildings they shot in.

Dresbach and her team created over 10,000 garments for the second season, outfitting extras and main characters alike, including multiple costume changes for single characters. “In season one, Claire has about six to eight changes in her costume,” she says. “In season two, she has, like, 25.” And it wasn’t as if these pieces were quick to throw together: “[Creating] one of Claire’s dresses takes about a month,” Dresbach says. “So we had to figure out how to mass-produce the 18th century.”

Such a challenge was what attracted her to “Outlander,” Dresbach says. “One of the reasons for taking the show for me was the opportunity to do 18th-century Paris,” Dresbach says. “But then it was like, ‘Oh my god I have to do 18th-century Paris.’” While season one was about dressing in raw wools for the Scottish elements, season two has Claire and Jamie in the “highly embellished and decorated” fabrics of France. “We wanted Claire and Jamie to look comfortable in the French court, but not part of the French court,” Dresbach says. “Jamie is very clean and masculine and simple, and for Claire it was really important for us to retain that Forties modern clean look that we had established for her before.”

The Forties inspirations were drawn from a range of European designers, including Balenciaga, Dior and Valentino. “Anybody who knows fashion can draw direct lines from Claire’s costumes to fashion of the Forties,” Dresbach says. “That’s the period Claire came from, and all of those incredible designers from 1946, 1947, they all came out of World War II, and so did Claire. We wanted to create that sensibility for the show.”

The costumes got some face time with fans, as they adorn the windows of Saks Fifth Avenue in the retailer’s New York and Los Angeles flagships from March 22 through Monday. “Being five floors above street level in Saks for a week, sawing the limbs and breasts off of mannequins, and adjusting mannequins to 18th-century bodies was really an experience of a lifetime,” Dresbach says of the mannequins they brought in from Scotland. “All of our costumes are made for corseted bodies, which really flatten the body. Even without the skinny mannequins of today, it just doesn’t work. So we literally sawed the breasts off of the mannequins — which is kind of creepy and weird to do.”