Blogs

WXER Count Blogula Count Blogula

YES! Another Batman Movie! Posted April 29, 2010 by Eddie Ybarra

Are you a Batman fan.  I am!  WB will be making another Batman movie!  Vincent Genovese of UGO.com has the 411 for you!

Dark Knight Sequel? Batman 3? Whatever, We Have Spoilers

Just as some heroes live long enough to become villains, some franchises live long enough to become trilogies. Harvey Dent may have missed his calling as a studio exec. 

It doesn't take the detective equipment of Lucius Fox to figure out that Warner Bros. is anxious to follow up the insanely successful The Dark Knight with another Christopher Nolan helmed Batman sequel, but searching beyond that requires a bit more craftiness. 

Here's what we know so far...

Confirmed

  • Warner Bros. have definitely given Batman 3 the green light, with a possible 2011-2013 release. (UGO)
  • Jonathan Nolan, the director's brother and screenplay collaborator for The Dark Knight, is penning the new script. Christopher Nolan told the L.A Time's, "My brother is writing a script for me and we’ll wait to see how it turns out.... He’s struggling to put it together into the epic story that you want it to be.” (L.A Times)

Rumored

  • Wally Pfister, cinematographer for The Dark Knight, spoke to Cinematical about the possibility of the third film beind 3-D stating, ""I did it for one shot of The Dark Knight because he said, you have to say you did it, and literally I had this strapped to my shoulder and I was carrying it. But I think Chris is game for doing something interesting like that, Lord knows that the 3-D fad might pass by the time that summer comes around."(Cinematical)

Debunked

  • Michael Caine decided to take back his casting scoop which included statements of Johnny Depp donning the Riddler attire in a September 2009 interview with MTV by saying, "Johnny Depp is great in anything, but there is no Johnny Depp in this Batman. They tell me in no uncertain terms." (MTV)
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman's name has been tossed around as a potential Penguin since the credits first rolled on The Dark Knight however he told MTV News he was more interested in watching someone else bring the pudgy criminal to life. (MTV)
  • Okay, everyone get ready to breathe a universal breathe a universal sigh of relief...Eddie Murphy will NOT be playing the Riddler. (Access Hollywood)
  • Even though original Catwoman Julie Newmar believes Angelina Jolie would "own the part", writers Jonathan Nolan and David Goyer do not have the feline caper in their sights. (FOX News)

Audio: Steve Carell Ready To Leave The Office Posted April 29, 2010 by Eddie Ybarra

Steve Carell is ready to call it quits after 8 seasons of playing "Michael Scott" on NBC's "The Office".  Some say it's a ploy to negoitate a new contract with NBC.  NBC is gonna find a way to screw this up.  Good thing I have the show on DVD.

Hit play below to hear it from Steve himself.

Steve Carell Confirms Office Departure

Blogging Your own Death...WOW Posted April 27, 2010 by Eddie Ybarra

This is one courageous woman.  This is how Eva handled her last 4 years of life. 

-e

Death at 25: Blogging the end of a life

By Madison Park, CNN
The former beauty queen stared into the camera, but this was no pageant or performance. She looked frail and thin, and her hair was rumpled. But Eva Markvoort smiled weakly.

"Hello to the world at large," she said in the video. "To my blog, to my friends, to everyone. I have some news today. It's kinda tough to hear, but I can say it with a smile." Propped in a hospital bed, Markvoort sat surrounded by her family. "My life is ending."

Markvoort had cystic fibrosis, an incurable disease that causes mucus to accumulate in the lungs. For nearly four years, she narrated an unvarnished blog about life with a terminal disease. Even when it appeared unlikely that she would receive a second double lung transplant, the 25-year-old continued to chronicle life on her blog.

The public sharing of one's last thoughts is a way to acknowledge that the end is near, but it also destigmatizes death for others, said medical experts who work with terminally ill patients.

In the Internet age, many people reflect on their lives through video, personal blogs and larger websites such as CaringBridge.org, where people who have major health events connect and share online.

"What we're seeing over the last decade, we are gradually moving from a culture that had become during the 20th century, very closed about death," said Dr. Chris Feudtner, research director of Palliative Care Services at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania.

A cultural shift has occurred, he said, referring to columnists and Randy Pausch, a computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon University, who discussed their impending deaths with frankness. Pausch's last lecture, urging students to fearlessly pursue their dreams, went viral on YouTube in 2007, getting more than 11 million views.

Their line of thinking may be, "I'm still alive. I don't want to be closed. I want connection. I want to be able to share what I'm learning on this journey," Feudtner said.

Bloggers like Miles Levin, an 18-year-old who had a rare soft-tissue cancer and died in 2007, and Michelle Lynn Mayer, a 39-year-old mother who had scleroderma and died in 2008, shared their thoughts on living and dying, too.

"We all tend to be open via video, blog or Facebook about what we do every day. It's hardly surprising that openness extends to people's last days or weeks," said Dr. David Cassarett, author of the book "Last Acts," about end-of-life decisions.

These bloggers, Cassarett said, are helping the rest of us through largely uncharted territory. He used a sports analogy to explain

"Hardcore bicycle riders ride in packs, and there's a tradition," he said. "The one in the front points out hazards in the road to those who come behind. It's both an opportunity to be helpful, if you're in front. You spot sewer grates, so others can avoid accidents."

Blogs like Markvoort's could be acting similarly, he said. They don't shy away from the ugliness and brutality of the dying process.

"They're not just about hope but also about despair. That is, they're telling us not just what we want to hear but also what we need to hear," Cassarett wrote.

Markvoort started her blog in 2006 because hospitalized patients with cystic fibrosis were isolated because of infection. Alone in her hospital room at Vancouver General Hospital after visiting hours, she sought to connect with other patients by finding them online.

The blog's name 65_RedRoses, originated from her childhood inability to pronounce cystic fibrosis; she called it "65 roses." Markvoort added the word red because it was her favorite color.

Markvoort was the subject of a Canadian documentary also called "65_RedRoses." It showed her harrowing experiences with the disease: violent coughing, vomiting, IVs, the painful procedures that made her scream.

The documentary followed her as she waited for a double lung transplant and as she formed online friendships with two American girls who have cystic fibrosis. The film ends on a happy note: Markvoort got her lung transplant and appeared to be on the road to recovery.

But less than two years later, her body began rejecting the organs. Her lung capacity dwindled, and every breath became laborious.

Sometimes, her blog posts were raw, filled with "episodes of projectile vomiting, hours of gasping for breath, waves of nausea lulling out into hours of sleepiness."

"I'm drowning in the medications," she wrote. "I can't breathe."

Initially, Markvoort's mother, Janet Brine, said, her daughter's openness made her feel uncomfortable.

"We connect differently than your generation. I'm part of the digital world," Brine recalled her daughter telling her.

The constant theme in Markvoort's blog is love.

In a video entry where she talks about her impending death, Markvoort said: "I think I'm very lucky, because I've loved more than you could possibly think, could possibly imagine. So I'm celebrating that: celebrating my life."

Markvoort grew up in a suburb of Vancouver, Canada. Girly to the core, she dyed her hair red and loved outrageous fashion like pink boas, polka dot dresses and striped knee socks. She was crowned a beauty queen (of New Westminster, a suburb of Vancouver) and attended University of Victoria, hoping to become an actress.

But she couldn't pursue that career because of her unpredictable health.

"But she has found other ways to have that artistic outlet, and writing the blog is one of them," her mother said.

She championed cystic fibrosis awareness and organ donations. From Los Angeles to Poland, letters, stuffed animals and cards poured into her hospital room.

"I felt so selfish when I stumbled across your [LiveJournal] on here, because I've been smoking cigarettes for years, taking my lungs for granted. You helped me quit the worst habit I've ever had," one wrote.

When Markvoort was too frail, she dictated blog posts to her friends and family.

"She had already processed the concept of dying," her mother said. "And for her, she came to terms with it quite quickly. For her it was like, 'Oh, my gosh, I don't know how much time I have. I have things to say.' There was a sense of urgency on her part."

Sometimes, her posts have no words, just pictures of her and her loved ones, with their eyes crossed, tongues sticking out and comical gestures.

"This is the end of my life, but it's not the end of my love," Markvoort said in a video entry.

She died the morning of March 27.

In the same style that she had allowed her readers (who were often strangers) into her life, Markvoort's family plans to hold a memorial service that will run in a live stream on her blog at 1 p.m. ET Friday.

"She indicated that she thought it would be a cool idea if whatever we did, was made available for her online blogging community," her mother said.

This Video Upset Me! Posted April 26, 2010 by Eddie Ybarra

What is wrong with people today.  This is very shocking to me.  Homeless man Hugo Alfredo Tale-Yax, 31, a Guatemalan immigrant, collapsed on a New York street after being stabbed by a knife-wielding attacker. Tale-Yax reportedly protected a woman from an attack, and was then stabbed several time in the chest. Dozens walked by the dying man on the sidewalk. One even stopped to snap a picture of the man on his camera phone.

It took 90 minutes for this man to get help.  Why are people so inhumane?  I'm disgusted.  This Hero died on the streets of NYC because no once cared.