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Monday, December 21, 2015

Miss Germany 'upset' over Pia Wurtzbach's win: 'None of us voted for Philippines'


Controversial Reaction of Miss Germany
Controversial statement & reaction of Miss Germany to Miss Universe scandal. What can you say?See more videos @ www.missosology.info
Posted by Missosology on Sunday, December 20, 2015

The official results card has been posted and apologies have been issued, both by host Steve Harvey and the organizers of the pageant, but controversy continues to plague the "very 2015" Miss Universe coronation night.

Miss Colombia Ariadna María Gutiérrez Arévalo was initially hailed Miss Universe 2015, but was stripped of the title four minutes later, when Harvey returned to the stage to apologize for his "mistake" in reading the results. A shocked Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach was then given the crown.

The response of the two beauty queens were posted in the official Facebook page of the pageant. Ariadna, surrounded by other candidates, stated that she is happy and graciously said that "everything happens for a reason." Pia, accompanied by Miss USA Olivia Jordan, was at a loss for words backstage after her "non-traditional" coronation.

#Colombiazoned trended on social media and while a healthy dose of sense of humor made the gaffe less awkward, not everyone was happy about what happened.

Hours after the pageant, beauty pageant blog Missosology shared a video on their Facebook page, showing Natalia Cruz interviewing a candidate identified as Miss Germany Sarah-Lorraine Riek. Miss Germany sympathized with Miss Colombia and claimed that Pia Wurtzbach did not get the other candidates' vote.

Miss Germany was asked to explain why they rushed to Miss Colombia instead of congratulating Miss Philippines and she responded, "Because none of us vote[d] for Miss Philippines, I am so sorry to say that."

"I really couldn't believe it, I was so upset. For me (she was robbed) as the real winner. I was very happy for Miss Colombia because she really deserved it. I'm really not happy with the result and so are the other girls, I'm sorry to say it," she told Cruz.

The video has been shared over 1,800 times and numerous comments were left in response to the controversial statements.

"Miss Germany, we all have something to say. You said your piece and that's all you can do now. That's all you can do," wrote Rudolphy Rychard

"Very unprofessional. You deserve to be in the 80th place," quipped Dorethy Mae Legaspi Sero. Jamel Manaloto added, "Think before you speak, Miss Germany!"

See more at GMA Network

Crown slips as Miss Universe 2015 host names the wrong woman as winner


The Miss Universe 2015 contest has ended in confusion and disarray after the host mistakenly named the wrong woman as the winner.
Ariadna Gutierrez Arevalo from Colombia had already been crowned and was standing on stage to cheers from the Las Vegas audience when mortified host Steve Harvey returned to announce the error.
“OK, folks, um, I have to apologise,” he said, walking back on stage while Arevalo was proudly waving to fans, holding the winner’s bouquet and wearing the Miss Universe sash. “The first runner-up is Colombia,” he went on, “Miss Universe 2015 is Philippines.”
The camera panned straight to a stunned Miss Philippines, Pia Alonzo Wurtzbach, who started slowly walking to the front of the stage. For a few awkward moments the two women stood side by side, infront of a TV audience of millions from around the world, before Harvey explained that he read the card naming the winner and runner-up in the wrong order.
“I will take responsibility for this, it was my mistake,” he told the crowd. “It’s on the card ... horrible mistake, but I can show it to you right here,” he said, holding up the card.
“It is my mistake, but it’s still a great night.”
“Please don’t hold it against the ladies, please don’t. I feel so badly but it’s still a great night.”
As he spoke, a former Miss Universe winner quickly removed the crown from Arevalo and placed it on Wurtzbach. The broadcast ended moments later.
The reaction on social media was swift, with viewers expressing dismay at the “fail of the decade”.

Later, Wurtzbach told reporters that she wished Arevalo well.

“I’m very sorry, I did not take the crown from her and I wish her well in whatever she wants to pursue after this pageant,” she said.
Harvey’s mistake is not the first time the wrong woman has been named the winner of a high-profile beauty pageant. In 2010 during a live television broadcast, Australian host Sarah Murdoch read out the wrong name in the finale of Australia’s Next Top Model.  

The competition started with women representing 80 countries between the ages of 19 and 27. For the first time, viewers at home weighed in, with their votes being tallied in addition to four in-person celebrity judges.
NBC Universal and Donald Trump co-owned the Miss Universe Organization until earlier this year. The real-estate developer offended Latin Americans in June when he made anti-immigrant remarks in announcing his Republican presidential run.
That led Spanish-language network Univision to pull out of the broadcast for what would have been the first of five years airing the pageants and NBC to cut business ties with Trump.
The former star of the “Celebrity Apprentice” reality show sued both companies, settling with NBC in September, which included buying the network’s stake in the pageants.
That same month, Trump sold the organization that includes the Miss Universe, Miss USA and Miss Teen USA pageants to entertainment company WME-IMG. 
Source: The Guardian

Sunday, December 20, 2015

After mix-up, Philippines wins Miss Universe 2015

Pia Wurtzbach

MANILA, Philippines (3rd UPDATE) – After a mix-up, Miss Philippines Pia Wurtzbach was crowned Miss Universe 2015 on Sunday, December 20 (Monday, December 21 in Manila) in Las Vegas.

First runner-up was Miss Colombia, Ariadna Gutierrez, who was first announced as the winner by host Steve Harvey – a mix-up that he said was a "horrible mistake" on his part. Second runner-up was Miss USA, Olivia Jordan.
Wurtzbach was visibly shocked when the "correction" in the announcement was made.
The Filipina beauty queen represented the country after her third attempt in the Binibining Pilipinas beauty pageant.
She now follows in the footsteps of Filipina Miss Universe winners Gloria Diaz (1969) and Margarita Moran (1973).
The pageant, held at the Planet Hollywood resort in Las Vegas, is the 64th edition of the annual global competition.
See more at RAPPLER

Sunday, December 13, 2015

8-year-old arson survivor finds hope in Christmas cards

All 8-year-old Safyre Terry wanted for Christmas was cards to fill her tree.
Arson survivor Safyre Terry has asked for Christmas to fill her tree
Facebook: Safyre Schenectady's Super Survivor
Unlike many children at Christmas, eight-year-old Safyre Terry only wanted one thing: to fill her tree with Christmas cards.
Safyre survived an arson attack two years ago that killed her father, sister and two brothers. She suffers from severe burns covering 75% of her body and lost her right hand and foot as a result of the injuries. She now lives with as her aunt, Liz Dolder, along with Dolder's husband and their own set of 8-year-old twins.
To celebrate the holidays, Dolder bought her niece a Christmas tree stand to hold cards. After posting a picture online to celebrate, the family have been inundated with cards and a crowdfunding account has raised over $220,000 (£145,000) for future medical costs.
"I've cried so many happy tears, I think I'm going into dehydration," Dolder told BBC Trending.
When they received her first holiday card, they posted on Facebook underneath a picture of Safyre and her card tree.
"Safyre is thrilled we got our first Christmas card. Thank you Aunt Lonnie. Safyre is excited to fill up the card tree. Sending out lots of holiday cheer," wrote Dolder.
Arson survivor Safyre Terry has been sent hundreds of Christmas cards to fill her tree.
Facebook: Safyre Schenectady's Super Survivor
Safyre was excited to fill up the tree, but her aunt warned her to be realistic. "We don't sugar coat anything in our house. The world is going to end up being honest with her, so I warned her we won't get that many cards, but we'll get a few," Dolder told the BBC.
Local resident Kevin Clark shared the picture writing, "I wonder how many of my friends would take the time to write and send Safyre a Merry Christmas card that she can hang on her card tree."
Clark met the family during a fundraiser held by his motorcycle club earlier this year.
Clark's post has been shared over 32,000 times since sharing the picture, and Safyre's family have now received over 300 cards
The attention drew people to an older crowdfunding page that had been set up in September to support Safyre's medical costs, with current donations far surpassing the original $15,000 goal.
Before the post went viral, Dolder was concerned about how their family would afford the year ahead. Her husband lost his job in August, and last year's holes in the walls are covered with Christmas decorations since renovations are too costly. Medical coverage was proving expensive, and they risked losing the house to foreclosure.
Dolder says that they will use the money to find a stable home for their family and to set up a trust for Safyre's education.
Cards have been sent from across the US, with people asking how they can send additional cards from as far as Uganda, Mexico and Poland.
"She's my reason. I knew that when she was saved from the fire. The world is so filled with hate. Never in our wildest dreams did we think that she'd bring the world together over Christmas cards."
Cards can be sent to Safyre, PO Box 6126, Schenectady, NY, 12306.
Source: BBC News

Friday, December 11, 2015

'The Color Purple': Theater Review

Cynthia Erivo and Joaquina Kalukango in 'The Color Purple'
Courtesy of Matthew Murphy

Newcomer Cynthia Erivo stars alongside Jennifer Hudson and Danielle Brooks, all three making their Broadway debuts, in director John Doyle's reappraisal of the 2005 musical based on Alice Walker's novel.


Wow, what a difference a more-focused production makes. When the musical adaptation of Alice Walker's searing story of abuse and deliverance, The Color Purple, premiered on Broadway in 2005, its rewards were compromised by the overblown production. Ten years later, director John Doyle and an electric cast assembled around transcendent British newcomer Cynthia Erivo as Celie have given the show a deep — and deeply satisfying — rethink. This revelatory overhaul is characterized by its grace, restraint and soaring spirituality, peeling back the excess to expose the life-affirming material's molten emotional core. It remakes a patchy musical as a thrilling one.
When it was announced that lead producers Scott Sanders and Oprah Winfrey, less than a decade after the original New York run closed, were transferring the radically pared-down production first seen in 2013 at London's tiny Menier Chocolate Factory, it seemed hasty. Now, it not only makes sense, it becomes essential, connecting to the heart of Walker's story with a power that eclipses both the previous production and Steven Spielberg's 1985 movie.
Every character feels more fully realized and interconnected, and downtrodden Celie's centrality to the narrative has been fortified, making her emancipation far more uplifting. Maybe it's just the enhanced vitality of the storytelling, but even the score by musical-theater novices Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray, with its diverse influences of pop, gospel, R&B, blues and jazz, sounds more robustly unified. The previously episodic show now feels all of one piece, and each song so rooted in the characters and their experience that even cliches and contrivances gain the dignity of truth.
Erivo's finely calibrated performance supplies the production's direct hit to the heart, mind and gut, but the headline news is the Broadway debut of Jennifer Hudson as Shug Avery, the flashy-trashy juke-joint singer who brings light, love and freedom into Celie's joyless life. How is she? Well, Hudson might not yet quite match the assurance of the cast's more seasoned stage performers in dramatic scenes, but with that voice, nobody's going to care. Her vocals are sensational — luscious and full-bodied, with astonishing control.
That applies whether Shug is levitating Celie's self-esteem in "Too Beautiful for Words," perhaps the musical’s prettiest song, or she's strutting and shimmying with sizzling heat through the raunchy showstopper, "Push da Button." Hudson's duet with Erivo on the delicate "What About Love?" is exquisite, and she builds the title anthem into a hymn to life that only the most stubborn churl could resist. With her finger-waved hair, she also looks a knockout in costumer Ann Hould-Ward's vibrant wardrobe.

Jennifer Hudson and Cynthia Erivo
Since Hudson's Oscar-winning breakthrough in Dreamgirls, Hollywood hasn't found interesting ways to tap her talent. So this is a smart move for her, with a role that's a star turn and yet also an integral part of an ensemble. You can almost sense her confidence onstage growing as the performance progresses, suggesting that once she fully settles in, she's going to be tremendous. Her work here feeds the hope that Hudson will become a frequent presence on Broadway.
Also making a welcome debut is Danielle Brooks, a Juilliard graduate best known as Taystee onOrange Is the New Black. She bites with relish into the fiercely independent Sofia, the juicy role patented onscreen by Winfrey, letting the humor and sensuality come naturally from this gutsy woman with her outsize presence. Sofia's songs — her refusal to be dominated, "Hell No!," and her hilariously frisky duet with newly tamed first love Harpo (Kyle Scatliffe), "Any Little Thing" — are both high points. Seeing this titanic character brought low by white brutality is soul crushing, and sharing in her reawakening, as she shakes off her physical ills with a salty chuckle, is cause for rejoicing.
But this production's manifold acts of renewal go far beyond its remarkable performances. In the show's defining 11 o'clock number, "I'm Here," in which an exultant Celie counts her blessings and reaffirms her place in the world, she sings: "Got my chair when my body can’t hold out." Doyle makes humble wooden chairs the key motif of his spare design. Instead of the first production's fussy scene-setting and pastel skies, their Amblin-style hues borrowed from Spielberg's movie, Doyle grounds the show in earth tones, with a rear wall of battered clapboard siding, hung with chairs. Those chairs are almost the only props used, serving as church pews, the plows and hoes of field hands, the weapons used by white colonists in Africa and the bars of Sofia's prison cell.

Danielle Brooks and Kyle Scatliffe
Doyle has built his reputation as a specialist in minimalist, presentational-style reinterpretations of musicals such as Sweeney Todd and Company, and while those are superior shows, in terms of craft this production stands alongside his best work. The stylized depiction somehow brings the setting of the Deep South in the early decades of the 20th century more vividly to life.
While meticulous attention has gone into reconsidering every detail, the approach pays off notably in the show's book — based on Walker's novel and Menno Meyjes' screenplay for the film — which now evidences greater economy. That's largely due to tightening, given that this production runs 25 minutes shorter than its predecessor. A device that only half-worked earlier — a Greek chorus of gossiping Church Ladies, played here by Carrie Compere, Bre Jackson and Rema Webb — now seems indispensable in weaving together the story's many chapters, leavening the narrative with comedy and enriching the sense of community that reaches out from the stage to draw in the audience.
One of the original show's more problematic sequences was the jump to Africa, to pick up the life of Celie's adored sister Nettie (Joaquina Kalukango), working as a missionary. Whereas before, that narrative shift brought a jarring detour into full-on Lion King exotica, Doyle transports us with the simple means of basketware carried by the female ensemble members, who unfurl lengths of African-print fabric. It's an enchanting story-theater effect that keeps us tethered to Celie's world, even as her imagination travels to another place.

Cynthia Erivo (far left), Jennifer Hudson (center) and cast
It also allows the evocative writing in Nettie's letters space to breathe: "It was like black seeing black for the first time. Shiny blue-black people looking real fine in brilliant blue robes that fly on the winds." Interweaving the African interlude with Sofia's hellish ordeal also works superbly. 
Kalukango conveys the unblemished purity of heart that makes Nettie Celie's lifeline, while, in a smaller role, Patrice Covington is a hoot as Squeak, the giddy flirt who moves in on Harpo after his ill-advised attempt to control Sofia.
The material's female-centric focus makes it inevitable that the women register strongest. But where Walker's piercing compassion really shines is in the redemption she allows the men — whether for their foolishness, like weak but sweet-natured Harpo; or for their cruelty, like his father, the man known as Mister (Isaiah Johnson), who begrudgingly takes the abused teenage Celie as his wife and treats her as a slave. That aspect is served with enormous sensitivity in this production, above all in the bid for atonement, "Mister's Song," a desperate soliloquy socked across by Johnson with naked contrition.

Cynthia Erivo, Isaiah Johnson and cast
The quality of the singing throughout, and the beauty of the harmonies, cannot be overpraised, starting with the very first captivating transition from Celie and Nettie's sweet childhood song, "Huckleberry Pie," to the infectious energy of Sunday-morning gospel fervor with "Mysterious Ways."
The anchor for every part of the story is Erivo's indelibly present Celie. Even when she first staggers into view, as a heavily pregnant child of 14, raped by the man who calls himself her father (Kevyn Morrow), she seems to have a more innate understanding of herself than in previous incarnations. There are hints of the inner strength that will eventually save her, even when she's at her lowest point. While you might think that would diminish the impact of her gradual emergence, somehow in Erivo's lucid, unflinching and rigorously honest characterization, it makes Celie's discovery of her voice more profoundly moving.
More than before, Celie embodies the end of the cycle of violence carried over from brutalized men old enough to have known slavery to the first generation born in freedom but not yet rid of the old burdens, like Mister. That’s chiefly thanks to Erivo. Her performance is so ingrained with bone-deep feeling that while the harrowing life it captures is unimaginable to us, the suffering and the liberation it also conveys become part of our shared experience.
When early on Erivo sings "Somebody's Gonna Love You" to the newborn child about to be taken from her, what strikes you is the clarity and force of her voice; the song pours forth from her with no sign of effort, and with the naturalness of speech. With each number she digs deeper, finding fresh reserves of strength, of anger and, finally, of jubilation. When, at the end, she launches into "I'm Here," it's hard to believe she has anyplace deeper left to go. But she does, and it floors you, leaving you both drained and exhilarated. Erivo's the real deal, and her performance in this very fine revisal is not to be missed.
Venue: Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, New York
Cast: Cynthia Erivo, Jennifer Hudson, Danielle Brooks, Isaiah Johnson, Kyle Scatliffe, Joaquina Kalukango, Dwayne Clark, Lawrence Clayton, Carrie Compere, Patrice Covington, Bre Johnson, Grasan Kingsberry, Kevyn Morrow, Antoine L. Smith, Carla R. Stewart, Akron Watson, Rema Webb
Director, set designer & musical staging: John Doyle
Music & lyrics: Brenda Russell, Allee Willis, Stephen Bray
Book: Marsha Norman, based on the novel by Alice Walker and the Warner Bros./Amblin Entertainment movie
Costume designer: Ann Hould-Ward
Lighting designer: Jane Cox
Sound designer: Gregory Clarke
Music director: Jason Michael Webb
Music supervisor: Catherine Jayes
Orchestrations: Joseph Joubert
Presented by Scott Sanders Productions, Roy Furman, Oprah Winfrey, David Babani, Tom Siracusa, Caiola Productions, James Fantaci, Ted Liebowitz, Stephanie P. McClelland, James L. Nederlander, Darren Bagert, Candy Spelling, Adam Zotovich, Eric Falkenstein/Morris Berchard, Just for Laughs Theatricals/Tanya Link Productions, Adam S. Gordon, Jam Theatricals, Independent Presenters Network, Carol Fineman, Sandy Block

'Donald, It Was a Movie' – See Harrison Ford's Perfect Response to Trump's Air Force One Praise



Harrison Ford Reacts to Donald Trump's Air Force One Praise
Harrison Ford
DOUGLAS GORENSTEIN/NBC

Harrison Ford wants Donald Trump to get off his proverbial plane. 

After the GOP front-runner praised the actor's turn as a terrorist-fighting president in 1997's Air Force One during a recent interview with The New York Times, Ford fired back with the perfect response. 

"Donald, it was a movie. It's not like this in real life. But how would you know?" the actor said in an interview with Studio 10 during an Australian press tour for his new film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens


See more at PEOPLE