“I think he’s the best goaltender in the history of the NHL.” –– Wayne Gretzky
There will be a Special Event Premiere Screening of “Making Coco: The Grant Fuhr Story” Tuesday, October 1st at 7pm at Ballpark Village in St. Louis (601 Clark Ave. St. Louis). Doors open at 6pm with Red Carpet Photo Opp. There will be aQ&a after screening with Fuhr and Kelly Chaseand Darren Pang moderating. The documentary features interviews with hockey legends Wayne Gretzky, Brett Hull, Mark Messier, Theo Fleury, Martin Brodeur, Jarome Iginla, Glenn Anderson, Chris Pronger, Glen Sather, Paul Coffey, Kevin Lowe, Kelly Chase and of course, the great Grant Fuhr. Ticket information can be found Here
International award-winning filmmaker Adam Scorgie is proud to present the Us Theatrical release of Making Coco: The Grant Fuhr Story. “Making Coco” makes it theatrical debut in St. Louis October 1st at Ballpark Village after being an...
There will be a Special Event Premiere Screening of “Making Coco: The Grant Fuhr Story” Tuesday, October 1st at 7pm at Ballpark Village in St. Louis (601 Clark Ave. St. Louis). Doors open at 6pm with Red Carpet Photo Opp. There will be aQ&a after screening with Fuhr and Kelly Chaseand Darren Pang moderating. The documentary features interviews with hockey legends Wayne Gretzky, Brett Hull, Mark Messier, Theo Fleury, Martin Brodeur, Jarome Iginla, Glenn Anderson, Chris Pronger, Glen Sather, Paul Coffey, Kevin Lowe, Kelly Chase and of course, the great Grant Fuhr. Ticket information can be found Here
International award-winning filmmaker Adam Scorgie is proud to present the Us Theatrical release of Making Coco: The Grant Fuhr Story. “Making Coco” makes it theatrical debut in St. Louis October 1st at Ballpark Village after being an...
- 9/4/2019
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Justin Bieber might have just scored himself a second career in hockey.
The 22-year-old singer made quite the impression at the NHL All-Star Celebrity Shootout on Saturday, where he joined Wayne Gretzky's winning team.
Exclusive: Justin Bieber Auctions Ferrari for Over $400,000: 'I Have to Say Goodbye to My Baby!'
Bieber was all over the ice during the game, completing successful zone entries and drawing penalties before chipping in offensively, picking up an assist on Eric Lindros' goal. It was a big comeback for the Biebs, who was pinned against the glass by Chris Pronger earlier in the game.
Exclusive: Kourtney Kardashian Is Not Hooking Up With Justin Bieber or Dating Scott Disick, Source Says
Despite getting smashed on the ice, JBiebs appeared to have a great day playing and mingling with some hockey greats.
Watch: Mark Wahlberg Says Justin Bieber Sent Him Photos of His Calvin Klein Underwear Ads
There's a chance Bieber...
The 22-year-old singer made quite the impression at the NHL All-Star Celebrity Shootout on Saturday, where he joined Wayne Gretzky's winning team.
Exclusive: Justin Bieber Auctions Ferrari for Over $400,000: 'I Have to Say Goodbye to My Baby!'
Bieber was all over the ice during the game, completing successful zone entries and drawing penalties before chipping in offensively, picking up an assist on Eric Lindros' goal. It was a big comeback for the Biebs, who was pinned against the glass by Chris Pronger earlier in the game.
Exclusive: Kourtney Kardashian Is Not Hooking Up With Justin Bieber or Dating Scott Disick, Source Says
Despite getting smashed on the ice, JBiebs appeared to have a great day playing and mingling with some hockey greats.
Watch: Mark Wahlberg Says Justin Bieber Sent Him Photos of His Calvin Klein Underwear Ads
There's a chance Bieber...
- 1/29/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
I discovered season two of RuPaul's "Drag Race" while convalescing on the couch during a New Year's bout of food poisoning. Thirteen episodes later and seven pounds lighter (best diet ever!), I had developed a new obsession: Raven .
Ok, his name is David Petruschin, but most people know him as the season two runner-up and a totally fierce West Hollywood drag queen. I wouldn't call my infatuation with him/her a bad thing, but I'm not sure it's healthy for a (98 percent) straight girl to lust after an (entirely) gay man in heels.
Is it?
I spent three insomnia-riddled nights watching clips of Raven (and those of my other favorites like Pandora Boxx) from the show, marveling at her beauty and versatility. The transformation these men go through is absolutely amazing. They go from beards and balls to perfectly contoured foundation and the fiercest tuck games in town. But when out of drag,...
Ok, his name is David Petruschin, but most people know him as the season two runner-up and a totally fierce West Hollywood drag queen. I wouldn't call my infatuation with him/her a bad thing, but I'm not sure it's healthy for a (98 percent) straight girl to lust after an (entirely) gay man in heels.
Is it?
I spent three insomnia-riddled nights watching clips of Raven (and those of my other favorites like Pandora Boxx) from the show, marveling at her beauty and versatility. The transformation these men go through is absolutely amazing. They go from beards and balls to perfectly contoured foundation and the fiercest tuck games in town. But when out of drag,...
- 2/8/2011
- by Dustin Rowles
Well, "Rubicon" ended tonight. And although I fully expected it to go out with a bang, it went out with a whimper. With no network confirmation of a second season (at least at 11:15 pm, Mst, as I write this) and few questions answered, this could be one of the most poorly conceived finales in recent memory. Maybe I need to watch it again before I make that judgment, but I really expected more, especially after kinetic pace of the last few episodes. I definitely expected Spangler to kill himself by the end and I wanted more of Kale Ingram. I wanted to know how the hell Andi got involved in this whole debacle and why she couldn't be this cool all season. Throughout the night I made note of the incredulous expressions of most of the cast during the episode. Now I, too, sit here incredulous: Is that it?...
- 10/18/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
I fully expected this penultimate episode of the series to accelerate full-force into the season finale next week. But it seems likely that we'll be left with more questions than answers and the empty promise of a second season pay-off. I'm not entirely sure "Rubicon" will make it past season one. I'm not wishing its demise, but I can't imagine there's a huge following after such a slow build, despite the to-die-for time slot. We make some big-time connections in episode 12, but we're only really getting to the core of the characters (and we've only got 60 more minutes to catch the bad guys and wrap up this circus -- the Atlas storyline can't sustain another season, in my opinion). It'll certainly be a shame if I never again type the name "Truxton" after next week.
Tonight we learn that Spangler, the king of Not Giving a Fuck, smokes out the...
Tonight we learn that Spangler, the king of Not Giving a Fuck, smokes out the...
- 10/11/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Now I know why I have a weird sexual thing for Will Travers -- he plays hockey. And he totally has a fear of commitment. He reminds me of my favorite ex-boyfriend, minus the dead father-in-law and irrational disregard for his own safety. In fact, there are a ton of small things in this episode that Will does that are the "Rubicon" equivalent of the girl in the horror movie running up the stairs instead of out the front door. If you're like me, you have a bruise on your forehead from banging it on the coffee table every time Will does something that is sure to get him killed (but at least we didn't end up with the cleanest gunshot wound ever like Donald Bloom).
The episode begins with a rough-looking Will waking up and blowing Andi off as he sprints to work. For some reason, this makes me entirely thrilled,...
The episode begins with a rough-looking Will waking up and blowing Andi off as he sprints to work. For some reason, this makes me entirely thrilled,...
- 10/4/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Apparently, we trust in no one. I'm itching to tie all this business up, because I can't take the creepiness anymore. The only relationships we can rely on are those between the Atlas MacDowell cronies and Spangler. They're also the only ones whose motives aren't suspect: they are keeping a secret and will stop at nothing to keep Will Travers from discovering it. Otherwise, nothing seems to be certain, especially after this episode. Can Will really trust an artist who doesn't live in a shoebox who talks to her sister on the phone in the bathroom? Maggie apparently can't trust her ex to be a good father, which Kale warned her about. The team isn't legally allowed to trust Tanya since she lost her clearance. And in the spirit of equality, the homosexual relationship is just as trust fucked. First we suspected Kale of working against Will but now we...
- 9/27/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Will. Will, Will, Will. You know why he works at Api? Because if he worked in ops, he'd be dead in 20 minutes. Last week, ya'll commented about the boneheadedness of his character and this week, well, yeah, we got more of the same. However, he does seem to get the ladies wet with a tomato, wine, and a big gun. Apparently, that and bugs in one's apartment leads to dirty sex with a stranger (and then cuddling the next night, which doesn't interest me so much). Will took his wine, tomato, and big gun across the alley to artist Andi's (although, we learn like every other "artist" in New York, she's actually an office worker. She probably also moonlights as a bartender when she can). He walks into her apartment, makes a crappy sandwich and some small talk, then proceeds to stare out her window into his own apartment. She...
- 9/20/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
I admittedly slacked a bit on this recap. I've been working non-stop and when I'm not working, I've been volunteering for the Fourmile Fire relief efforts in Boulder. When the opportunity came up last night to blow off some steam with my coworkers, I took it. I'm going to keep this recap short and sweet, since I have to be back at work soon. But thanks to OnDemand, I caught episode eight of Rubicon this morning; this show is best watched this way (unless you have Tivo), because you can pause and rewind. Every little detail matters because you never know when they're going to pop back up.
This week we get even further entangled in Kale's web of deception, we learn that not all positive drug tests end in termination and that James the lawyer likes getting blown by his secretary daily at 3pm. Oh, and there's the Abu...
This week we get even further entangled in Kale's web of deception, we learn that not all positive drug tests end in termination and that James the lawyer likes getting blown by his secretary daily at 3pm. Oh, and there's the Abu...
- 9/13/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Last night was the third fast-moving and interesting episode of "Rubicon," where secrets were revealed, as were weaknesses and strengths of our characters. The FBI raids Api because there's a leak in the building. Everyone's put on lockdown and forced to take polygraph tests. What could have been an episode that makes the audience as stir-crazy as the employees turned into an evaluation of how each member of Api deals with stress and how it affects the decisions they make. We also learn that Asshole is probably a philanderer, Will and Miles narrowly escape being fired and Kale is a badass.
I'm going to get my complaints out of the way: first, why does Katherine's narrative exist at all in this episode? We got about two minutes of Katherine scenes and it feels like they could have been shelved until next week and been further explored then. We don't need...
I'm going to get my complaints out of the way: first, why does Katherine's narrative exist at all in this episode? We got about two minutes of Katherine scenes and it feels like they could have been shelved until next week and been further explored then. We don't need...
- 9/7/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
So last week we finally got the episode that shocked this series to life and this week, I expected much of the same. To some extent, my expectations were fulfilled: the characters seem more sincere and we're getting more plot exposition. It's also clear that Will (James Badge Dale) is getting more and more traumatized by the formal and informal weights of his job (it's not everyday we need to please the new boss and figure out if he had our father-in-law murdered). However, the episode was a bit choppy; the editors don't seem to have found their pacing, shifting from plodding and painfully slow to scenes that last about 10 seconds. A prime example is the opening scene where we see Kale breaking into Will's apartment and observing the post-it notes spewed over the carpet. Then we cut to credits, nothing more of that.
Will's narrative centers on his relationship...
Will's narrative centers on his relationship...
- 8/30/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Man oh man, did shit just get real on "Rubicon" last night or what? The episode began frenetically and ended with a cut to black that left me wanting more ... but this time, I wasn't wanting more in that I was unsatisfied, but wanting more as in "I want to know what happens next Sunday."
Instead of the typical brooding and plodding (I'm obviously not a fan of brooding and plodding), we get a harried Bancroft running up to Will on the street and asking about the seven names. Will brings up Donald Bloom (Michael Gaston, who guested in the last season of "Damages," one of the most underrated shows on TV, in my opinion), the only X-factor on the list, and Bancroft tells him to access the white papers and to "connect the dots."
Connect the dots, indeed. Tonight, we connected Will and Katherine; Tanya, talent and alcohol; and Bloom and Kale (Will's boss,...
Instead of the typical brooding and plodding (I'm obviously not a fan of brooding and plodding), we get a harried Bancroft running up to Will on the street and asking about the seven names. Will brings up Donald Bloom (Michael Gaston, who guested in the last season of "Damages," one of the most underrated shows on TV, in my opinion), the only X-factor on the list, and Bancroft tells him to access the white papers and to "connect the dots."
Connect the dots, indeed. Tonight, we connected Will and Katherine; Tanya, talent and alcohol; and Bloom and Kale (Will's boss,...
- 8/23/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
I got angry when Comcast interrupted the fourth inning of the Phillies (eventual) winning game over the Mets to remind me to watch "Rubicon." Then I remembered I could wait until the post-"Mad Men" episode and pretty much get drunk and tune out because Comcast's description was all I really needed to know:
When Will and Spangler travel to Washington, D.C., the team are left to make an important decision on their own. Meanwhile, Katherine discovers a mysterious voice mail that was left on Tom's cell phone the day before he died.
Good job, Comcast. That was dead on.
Besides a number of meal-related montages (I have to wonder if the show is sponsored by the coffee industry), the same relentlessly plodding music and a couple pathetic attempts at one-liners, there wasn't much more to the episode. Once again -- "Rubicon" isn't delivering on its once-promising premise. Much like Will and his coworkers,...
When Will and Spangler travel to Washington, D.C., the team are left to make an important decision on their own. Meanwhile, Katherine discovers a mysterious voice mail that was left on Tom's cell phone the day before he died.
Good job, Comcast. That was dead on.
Besides a number of meal-related montages (I have to wonder if the show is sponsored by the coffee industry), the same relentlessly plodding music and a couple pathetic attempts at one-liners, there wasn't much more to the episode. Once again -- "Rubicon" isn't delivering on its once-promising premise. Much like Will and his coworkers,...
- 8/16/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Seriously. It's called "exposition." You need to give us something. And what we're getting in these 47 minutes is a lot of melancholy faces, coding montages and violin music.
I'm all for the slow build narrative; one of this year's best examples was "Breaking Bad's" "The Fly" episode. It contained the perfect amount of dialogue and metaphor, with very little action, really, but it didn't feel like filler. That particular episode deepened the tension felt by the viewer, not necessarily between the characters themselves, and made me even more invested in the coming episodes. In "Rubicon," the entire show feels like filler -- bad filler. It's like substituting shards of glass for bread crumbs in a really bad crabcake. Unless this show gives viewers a reason to care (besides being the lead-in to "Mad Men"), we're going to tune out. I'm still hanging on because 1) I promised Dustin I would...
I'm all for the slow build narrative; one of this year's best examples was "Breaking Bad's" "The Fly" episode. It contained the perfect amount of dialogue and metaphor, with very little action, really, but it didn't feel like filler. That particular episode deepened the tension felt by the viewer, not necessarily between the characters themselves, and made me even more invested in the coming episodes. In "Rubicon," the entire show feels like filler -- bad filler. It's like substituting shards of glass for bread crumbs in a really bad crabcake. Unless this show gives viewers a reason to care (besides being the lead-in to "Mad Men"), we're going to tune out. I'm still hanging on because 1) I promised Dustin I would...
- 8/9/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
It's been a while since the sneak preview of the season premiere of Rubicon (a dead chemist and a Draper divorce later, to be specific). Note: for those of you who just bitched about spoilers in the last sentence, you can blow me. I have no patience for you people who insist on waiting for the two greatest shows on TV to come out on Netflix. Anyway, I don't even remember the main character's name or why I'm supposed to care about him at all, except for the fact that everyone he's ever loved is dead. There's a tense opening shot of him on the roof of a building, looking down at the ant-people on the street and out to the harbor, and during which everyone in the world except for James Badge Dale knows his character's not going to jump. Then the credits roll. And now this show has to suck me back in.
- 8/2/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
After the recent gay-baiting in Chicago around the recent National Hockey League championship — first by the Chicago Tribune which posted a picture of Philadelphia Flyer Chris Pronger in a skirt, then by someone in the lockerroom of the Blackhawks who wrote "Chris Pronger is gay" on a board — it's nice to be able to report that the Blackhawks have decided to participate in this year's Gay Pride Parade in Chicago.
Blackhawks President John McDonough is sending the Stanley Cup (the trophy awarded to the winner) to the parade and Brent Sopel, a defenseman for the Blackhawks, is going to represent the team. Said Sopel, "I am honored to do it." Sopel will be joined by his wife and their four kids which I think is a great sign of how much the world has changed.
No doubt Tony Perkins of the American Family Association is already composing a press release condemning the whole thing.
Blackhawks President John McDonough is sending the Stanley Cup (the trophy awarded to the winner) to the parade and Brent Sopel, a defenseman for the Blackhawks, is going to represent the team. Said Sopel, "I am honored to do it." Sopel will be joined by his wife and their four kids which I think is a great sign of how much the world has changed.
No doubt Tony Perkins of the American Family Association is already composing a press release condemning the whole thing.
- 6/22/2010
- by michael
- The Backlot
Gee, Now That's Really A Shame
This week's news seemed to have an extra helping of gay guys doing dumb and/or self-serving things that, frankly, got on my nerves.
Leading off the idiot parade, it looks like Perez Hilton may have finally gone too far by tweeting out a picture of an apparently pantyless Miley Cyrus exiting a car ala what Britney Spears did some time ago. This could potentially qualify as child porn and, if convicted, Perez (Aka Mario Lavandeira) could actually do some jail time.
Gee. How terrible.
I don't want to revel in the misfortune of someone else, but I'm a firm believer in you reap what you sow and when someone fouls the pop culture waters the way Perez has, well, let's just say I'm not surprised.
I always thought Perez would come to a bad end of some kind thanks to his endless gossipmongering and hateful posts,...
This week's news seemed to have an extra helping of gay guys doing dumb and/or self-serving things that, frankly, got on my nerves.
Leading off the idiot parade, it looks like Perez Hilton may have finally gone too far by tweeting out a picture of an apparently pantyless Miley Cyrus exiting a car ala what Britney Spears did some time ago. This could potentially qualify as child porn and, if convicted, Perez (Aka Mario Lavandeira) could actually do some jail time.
Gee. How terrible.
I don't want to revel in the misfortune of someone else, but I'm a firm believer in you reap what you sow and when someone fouls the pop culture waters the way Perez has, well, let's just say I'm not surprised.
I always thought Perez would come to a bad end of some kind thanks to his endless gossipmongering and hateful posts,...
- 6/18/2010
- by michael
- The Backlot
If you watched the season finale of Breaking Bad last night (side note: holy fucking shit, right? Can't wait for season four), you saw that AMC ran a sneak preview of its new show, "Rubicon," premiering August 1. AMC Originals are either hit ("Mad Men," "Breaking Bad") or miss (their remake of the miniseries The Prisoner) and the jury's still out on "Rubicon" after one episode. The show stars James Badge Dale ("The Pacific," "24") as Will Travers, a code breaker with the American Policy Institute in New York. He's pensive, mopey and unnaturally smart, throwing out factoids like the annual military spending of Croatia at the drop of a hat. He's a crossword puzzle whiz, which also serves as the first step in the unhurried build toward what will be the season's lynchpin conflict.
"Rubicon" relies on the tropes of most dramas, like ominous string music and a snail's paced narrative,...
"Rubicon" relies on the tropes of most dramas, like ominous string music and a snail's paced narrative,...
- 6/14/2010
- by Dustin Rowles
Plus Sandra Bernhard for the Ali Forney Center, Cassidy Haley for the Trevor Project, and is Glee changing the world?
I’m sure it will make all my coworkers happy that AMC has renewed Breaking Bad for a fourth season. I’m the only one who doesn’t think it’s the best hour on television, because I haven’t given it an hour on my television.
Calgary held their first Queer Prom over the weekend, giving those young queer men and women the chance to reclaim the night that they skipped, or maybe went with an opposite sex “friend.” This warms the lump of coal where my heart should be, since I skipped senior prom entirely.
I imagine somewhere backstage at the Tony Awards, people are weeping that a musical version of Elf is headed to the Great White Way.
Ozzy Osbourne is going to write a health column for the Sunday Times.
I’m sure it will make all my coworkers happy that AMC has renewed Breaking Bad for a fourth season. I’m the only one who doesn’t think it’s the best hour on television, because I haven’t given it an hour on my television.
Calgary held their first Queer Prom over the weekend, giving those young queer men and women the chance to reclaim the night that they skipped, or maybe went with an opposite sex “friend.” This warms the lump of coal where my heart should be, since I skipped senior prom entirely.
I imagine somewhere backstage at the Tony Awards, people are weeping that a musical version of Elf is headed to the Great White Way.
Ozzy Osbourne is going to write a health column for the Sunday Times.
- 6/14/2010
- by lostinmiami
- The Backlot
By Dylan Stableford
For the vast majority of that Americans that don’t know and/or care about hockey, the Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Chicago Blackhawks and Philadelphia Flyers is headed to a Game 6, with Chicago up three games to two in the best-of-seven series.
Continuing the rich tradition of sports newsprint trash talk, the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday printed a poster depicting the Flyers’ Chris Pronger as “Chrissy Pronger,” a female figure skater in a pink-and-orange ballerina...
For the vast majority of that Americans that don’t know and/or care about hockey, the Stanley Cup Playoffs between the Chicago Blackhawks and Philadelphia Flyers is headed to a Game 6, with Chicago up three games to two in the best-of-seven series.
Continuing the rich tradition of sports newsprint trash talk, the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday printed a poster depicting the Flyers’ Chris Pronger as “Chrissy Pronger,” a female figure skater in a pink-and-orange ballerina...
- 6/8/2010
- by Dylan Stableford
- The Wrap
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