Archive for December, 2007

Have a Great 2008

Monday, December 31st, 2007

What a year this has been. One of my top accomplishments was that I returned to the ranks of the full time working class. It had been a long, long time since I’d had weekly employment for which I had to fill out W2 forms. Thank heaven for my radio gig.

As for 2007, I can’t think of where to begin. Sherri Shepherd just about made the concept of Black History Month crash and burn when she got a big money job on network TV and then proceeded to tell the country that she wasn’t sure if she believed the earth is round. But, somehow, she did believe that Who’s Your Caddy? was a comedy script that she couldn’t turn down. Sen. Larry Craig broke a racial stereotype by proving that white men can dance, thanks to the tap routine he did in a public men’s room. Britney Spears messed up a dance routine so badly on MTV that I’m surprised no one came up with the concept of making a musical Valley of the Dolls and putting her in Patty Duke’s old “Neeley O’Hara” role. Wouldn’t that be perfect casting? Her sister, Jamie Lynn, seems to be ripe for starring in a musical version of Juno. Our president wanted to veto a bill approving health care for kids. A teen-ager in India could be a new leader in Pakistan. Can you just imagine if one of the Bush girls ran this country for 24 hours on “Take Your Daughter To Work Day”?

Wow. We made it through another year. Here’s to you. I wish health, love and happiness for the new year. When you think about it — you can’t do much better than that.

“There Will Be Blood”

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Wow. What a movie. Daniel Day-Lewis — how much more brilliant can one actor be?

Have a Holly, Jolly Kwanzaa

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Today, Dec. 26th, marks the first day of Kwanzaa. I’m sure you’ll hear about it on local TV newscasts and there are cards for it in your local drugstores, but you may not know what it is. Kwanzaa is a week-long cultural celebration rooted in African tradition. Once a “down-low” holiday, it’s become nationally recognized. When it rates a Hallmark card, it’s officially off the “down-low” or Kathy Griffin D-List. The Kwanzaa cultural holiday started in 1966 on the West Coast. The Black academic who came up with the idea was, if I remember correctly, Prof. Booraka Saki Wansum C. Phoodmama, formerly known as Tyrone Jackson.

This is why I generally don’t get excited about Kwanzaa like I do about Christmas morning. Kwanzaa stresses that you purchase and give inexpensive gifts to your Black family and friends the last week of December. Like I need some of my relatives to be any cheaper than they already are. That professor in Berkeley, California must have been crazy when he told my people to go out Kwanzaa shopping on the day after Christmas, when everything is marked down, and look for a low-cost Kwanzaa gift. It’s like this — if Oprah had a “My Favorite Things: Kwanzaa Edition” special, she’d be shouting “Come on out, ghetto elves! Everybody gets a bag of one dozen white cotton gym socks! YOU get a bag! YOU get a bag! YOU get a bag!”

I get the essence of the cultural celebration, however I feel we should upscale each other. In fact, the new slogan should be “give a gift that could be opened on Oprah” or “Bling! Went the Strings of My Heart.” But that’s just me.

Merry Everything!

Monday, December 24th, 2007

It’s Christmas Eve, my darlings! Tonight, millions of us will hope that a big, burly man will bring his swinging sack into our homes and pull out something that will make us smile. Merry Christmas — a very Merry Christmas to you all. Enjoy it and make this Christmas a memorable one for, next year, Santa Claus could be homeless because of global warming and the reindeer could be weak from malnutrition. Since our president has turned his back on environmental issues, next year Donder and Blitzen could look just like the Olsen twins. With antlers. Frankly, I’m concerned.

Have you seen any new movies? Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story didn’t make as much money over the weekend as hoped, but it still supplies plenty of silly laughs. Perhaps it’s more a warm weather release than a yuletide one. Nevertheless, I saw it and I haven’t laughed that hard at the sight of a Caucasian penis in years. It kept my interest more than that veddy British romantic epic called Atonement. I know that some national critics are raving about the epically long tracking shot in the evacuation at Dunkirk sequence in the WWII section. But, personally, if I wanted to applaud a Ferris wheel, some horses and a soldier running out of a crowded men’s lavatory to throw up, I’d go to Knott’s Berry Farm in Southern California.

I’ll be going to church later to think about that unmarried female under the age of 18 whose pregnancy became news all over the world. No, not Jamie Lynn Spears — Mary, the mother of Baby Jesus. Mary wasn’t condemned. But, then, she didn’t have her own show on Nickelodeon.

That’s all for now. Let visions of sugarplums dance in your head. We need a little Christmas. May you have someone to hug. Happy holidays.

The Vatican Rag

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

My spiritual leaders in Vatican City have condemned the new movie, The Golden Compass. Obviously, the holy rollers didn’t dig the bear fight like I did or Nicole Kidman’s fabulous wardrobe, which made me feel that maybe Jesus had resurrected Edith Head for one more costume design assignment.

The Vatican feels that the new children’s movie is anti-Christian and promotes a cold and hopeless world without God. So, kids, if you’re reading this right now, Uncle Bobbo recommends that you rent a DVD of the Oscar-winning 1961 classic, Judgment at Nuremberg, instead. After you watch that movie, based on a real life series of horrible events, compose a 100 word essay on what the Vatican did to keep the Holocaust from happening in 1930s Europe. OK, wait. You can make it a 10 word essay.

Trust me on this, The Golden Compass promotes two things — girl power when helping friends in need…and the fact that Nicole Kidman can’t deliver rave reviews and a big movie audience unless she’s wearing a fake nose that makes her look like Ruth Buzzi. Merry Christmas.

Radio Days

Monday, December 17th, 2007

It’s a windy, snowy Monday morning here in Gotham. If you listen to our Wake Up With Whoopi radio show cities that still carry us, we’re off for Christmas break. You’ll hear our “Best of” shows starting this morning.

However, I can be heard live and fresh today from 11a to 2p et with Frank DeCaro. I’ll be his guest co-host on his Sirius Satellite radio party. If you have access to Sirius Out Q 109, lend me your ears today. Frank usually has some delightfully unpredictable call-ins from listeners and his guests are lively. The last time I sat in, just last month, I met and interviewed actor Cheyenne Jackson. That was a major thrill. He’s currently on Broadway in the hit Xanadu! I saw his strong performance as Mark Bingham, the openly gay athlete who fought hijackers in the movie United 93. Jackson is one of the warmest actors I’ve met — and brave too. We talked about his performance as Bingham, the Bush Administration, his new Broadway hit, and his boyfriend of eight years. Sirius-ly, tune in today if you can. Keep warm and Merry Christmas. (Since you may need some holiday eye candy, I’ll post pics of actor Cheyenne Jackson. He’s got all sorts of people swooning at every Broadway performance.)

Cheyenne Jackson in Xanadu

music to your ears

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

If you never saw the movie ONCE when it was in wide release in the summer, rent the DVD that is due out by this weekend. It’s a beauty — a simple and very original musical about two young musicians who meet and fall in love. The movie is quite contemporary yet structured like the classic film Brief Encounter. The songs come about so naturally that you don’t even realize you’re watching a movie musical. Brilliant! And the rock songs are really good. It’s a foreign indie movie. The guy is an Irish street singer hoping to land a recording contract. That means you don’t have to worry about subtitles. I’d love if one of the tunes from that score took the Best Song Academy Award. But then I saw WALK HARD: The Dewey Cox Story. That film has a new song called “Mama, You Got To Love Your Negro Man.” I really want that one to get a nomination — just to see it performed on the Oscars by someone like Clay Aiken. But that’s just me.

Sweeney Todd

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Johnny Depp & Helena Bonham Carter

Johnny Depp is simply the best. I saw Tim Burton’s Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. I thought it would be okay. It’s better that just “okay.” If you’ve heard the Stephen Sondheim Broadway score, much of it has been retained for the film. Depp doesn’t have a big, booming Broadway voice but his singing voice in the picture is not bad. On stage, it was practically an operetta. The movie has a rock operetta feel. It’s a movie musical that taps into a couple of things at play in the world today. This version is about revenge and industry. Sweeney was robbed of his loves as a young man and now, in middle age, he’s darkened into a madman whose motto is “Never forget. Never forgive.” With the help of the manipulative and amoral Mrs. Lovett, he kills barbershop customers in 19th Century London and Mrs. Lovett turns the bodies into meat pies. It’s a nice little corporation for the two — with her making a small fortune on the misfortunes of others. The more he kills, the more money she makes.

A lot of us at the screening were unprepared for Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter to be as wickedly good as they were. There’s a lot of gushing blood in an absurd old horror movie way that is so Tim Burton. It’s very over-the-top but the movie works. It’s beautiful to see — great production values — and the orchestrations are lush. Even though you shouldn’t be on Sweeney’s side, you feel guilty not caring about some of the barber’s victims because they’re blackmailers, child beaters and rapists. Ultimately, you feel that Tim Burton’s vision as a director in this version of Sondheim’s musical is that revenge is futile and takes a heavy toll. If that’s the case, Mission Accomplished.

Johnny Depp as Sweeney Todd — he’s all the rage.

for classic film fans

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

Today is the birthday of former musical comedy movie superstar Deanna Durbin. She is still rich, retired and living in the south of France. She’s 86. I sent her a gourmet fruit and muffin basket. I figured that, at her age, she could use the fiber.

career update

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Top 5, the retro food countdown show I hosted on Food Network, is still airing! I have absolutely no idea if any of you would like to wake up with me, but the show now airs two back-to-back episodes early Tuesday mornings. You can see me from 4-5:00am on Food Network.

As for Wake Up With Whoopi, our radio show no longer airs here in New York City, but it’s still carried live in nine other markets and you can stream us on your computer. I’m on every Tuesday and Friday morning between 7-7:30 with my film reviews, entertainment reports and snappy patter. I also write a page of reviews for Whoopi Goldberg’s radio show website. To read reviews and see clips, go here:

www.whoopi.com/rivers.html

By the way — remember that there’s an article about yours truly in The Advocate. If it’s still on the magazine stands, it’s the issue with Mary J. Blige on the cover. Stop into a Barnes & Noble or Borders and give me a look. I’m on page 12. You’ll see a pic of Whoopi and me. Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah!