Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Celine Dion Pregnant With Second Child!!!



Canadian singer Celine Dion has made no secret of her desire to have another child.
And now she is!
According to a report in Tuesday's Journal de Montréal, the 41-year-old is sperminated.
Celine and her husband, René Angélil, 67, conceived with the help of a team of fertility doctors in New York.
The couple’s first child, René-Charles, was born in January 2001.
Congrats Celine and fam!
[Image via WENN.]

New Twilight: New Moon Pics!












Get ready for this Twilight fanatics!
The Los Angeles Times' "Hollywood Backlot" was able to visit the set of The Twilight Saga: New Moon and, lucky for us, they snapped some great behind-the-scenes shots.
As usual, Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner were looking gorgeous!
As for Kristen Stewart, well, she managed to ruin a few shots.
The photos were taken on set a few minutes outside of Vancouver as the cast and crew shot scenes late at night until 4am at the Capitano Park Forest.
Checkout the rest of the exclusive photos HERE!
[Images via David Strick for L.A. Times.]




























Richard Gere Must Be So Jealous!



Think your pet has a good life? Well, think again!
Brad Pitt has just dumped $82,000 on a custom home for his kids' gerbils.
What!? We understand loving your pet, but this is a little extreme! That's enough to buy a home for an actual person in some places!!!
The lucky gerbils were picked out by Maddox and Pax last month, when their parents took them to a local pet store in France.
An onlooker says "The boys were really keen to get the gerbils and it was Angelina who reached into the cage to pet them before a store worker got them out."
Angie touching a rodent!? Where were the paparazzi on this one?
The swanky gerbil digs will include tunnels, platforms, seesaws and mazes, which will go in the family's mansion in the South of France.
The design was overseen by the kids and Brad. According to a source "Brad pores over architectural journals…he had so much fun putting the run together with his kids…"
Sounds like some good father/kid bonding to us. Who else can say they helped design a gerbil house with their father?
Or better yet, what gerbil can say they live with the Jolie-Pitts!?
[Image via FayesVision/WENN.]

It's On: Angelina jolie vs. Megan!


We knew something like this would happen sooner or later!
Look-a-like actresses Angelina Jolie and Megan Fox are both vying for the title role in the remake of Barbarella.
HOT!
Apparently Fox's quick rise to stardom is making Ange nervous, not to mention the 11-year age gap between them!
"Ange is really feeling the pressure," says an insider. "Ange knows that to win roles she has to look youthful."
The 1968 film originally starred Jane Fonda as the sci-fi fantasy bombshell.
It's a tough call, ladies. You're both fierce!
Who would U rather see in the role?
[Image via Apega / Adriana M. Barraza / WENN.]

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Santa Angelina Keeps It Up



Santa Angelina is dedicated to her cause!

Jolie, who holds the title of a UN Goodwill Ambassador, traveled to Kenya this weekend to help draw attention to the overcrowding problem in refugee camps.

Camps for refugees of Somalia opened in 1991 - only built to accommodate 90,000 refugees. The camps currently hold 285,000 people, with that number growing every month.

Ange visited the camp in Dadaab on Saturday to speak with the Somalian refugees, hoping to discover a solution to the issue at hand.

So inspiring!

P.S. Eat, bitch!

[Image via AP Images.]

Friday, September 18, 2009

Police arrest suspect in Lohan burglary



LOS ANGELES – Police arrested a man on Thursday who is suspected of breaking into the homes of Lindsay Lohan and Audrina Patridge.

Officer Rosario Herrera said detectives arrested Nicholas Prugo, 18, on suspicion of felony burglary. Prugo was being held on $20,000 bail.

Herrera said the investigation is ongoing and there were no details about whether any property was recovered. No one else has been arrested, she said.

Jail records did not indicate whether Prugo has an attorney.

Lohan's Hollywood Hills home was broken into last month. Patridge, a star of MTV's show "The Hills," had her home burglarized in February.

Both women turned over surveillance footage of the break-ins. Lohan's footage showed three people, while Patridge's cameras captured a man and a woman.

A publicist for Patridge, 24, declined to comment. Lohan's publicist did not immediately reply to an e-mail sent after hours Thursday.

Lohan, 23, has starred in films such as "Mean Girls" and "Herbie Fully Loaded." She posted a Twitter message after the burglary at her house stating that several items of sentimental value were taken.

Neither actress was home at the time of the burglary.

John Leguizamo, Penelope Cruz win ALMA Awards



LOS ANGELES – "Nothing Like the Holidays" had a merry time at the ALMA Awards.

The ensemble family drama starring John Leguizamo, Debra Messing and Freddy Rodriguez won three awards at Thursday's ceremony, which recognized achievements by Hispanic artists in film, television and music over the past year. Leguizamo, screenwriter Rick Najera and director Alfredo De Villa were each awarded trophies for their work in the film category.

Penelope Cruz won the film actress award for "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" while "Twilight" makeup artist Jeanne Van Phue and hair stylist Mary Ann Valdes picked up awards for their behind-the-scenes work. David Archuleta and Pitbull won prizes in the music category during the ceremony at UCLA's Royce Hall. The show is scheduled to be televised Friday by ABC.

Honorees in the TV category included Benjamin Bratt from A&E's "The Cleaner" as drama actor, Lauren Velez from Showtime's "Dexter" as drama actress, Oscar Nunez from NBC's "The Office" as comedy actor, Selena Gomez from Disney Channel's "Wizards of Waverly Place" as comedy actress and Latino Public Broadcasting in the documentary category.

Oscar De La Hoya received the Special Achievement in Sports Television award while Salma Hayek was given the Anthony Quinn Award for Industry Excellence. Rita Moreno presented a tribute to the late Ricardo Montalban. ALMA Awards creator Raul Yzaguirre was awarded the first-ever PepsiCo Adelante Award for his lifetime of service to the Latino community.

The ALMA Awards were created in 1995 by the National Council of La Raza, a national Latino civil rights and advocacy organization, as part of its effort to promote diverse and fair portrayals of Latinos in the media. ALMA stands for American Latino Media Arts and means "soul" in Spanish. George Lopez and Eva Longoria Parker hosted this year's ceremony.

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On the Net:

http://www.almaawards.com

Lights out for 'Guiding Light' after final show



NEW YORK – Friday marked the final flicker of CBS' "Guiding Light," as that venerable daytime drama logged its farewell hour after 72 years on the air.

The last episode took an upbeat, life-affirming tone, complete with a scene that gathered many of the characters at a picnic in the park on a beautiful day.

And the closing moments sealed the future of the show's signature on-and-off-again supercouple: Reva (Kim Zimmer, who created the role in 1983) and Josh (Robert Newman, who started on the show in 1981).

They rendezvoused, according to plan, at the local lighthouse and declared their undying love. Then these soul mates climbed into Josh's pickup truck.

"You ready?" asked Josh.

"Always," Reva said.

And they drove away, as the words "The End" flashed on the screen before a final fade-out.

"Guiding Light" began on radio in 1937, then moved to TV in 1952. In recent decades it was set in the midwestern town of Springfield, where it focused on the Spaulding, Lewis and Cooper clans.

Along with veteran cast members, the show also played host to many actors who left to find larger stardom elsewhere. These include Kevin Bacon, JoBeth Williams, James Earl Jones, Allison Janney, Brittany Snow, Hayden Panettiere and Melina Kanakaredes.

CBS issued word that it would be axed last April, and production of the show, which was taped in Manhattan and in nearby Peapack, N.J., wrapped in August.

"Guiding Light" now becomes the latest victim of the ratings collapse afflicting the entire soap-opera world. With an average 2.1 million viewers, it was the least-watched of all the network soaps, which after today (and some 15,700 past weekdays for "Light") will total only seven.

On Oct. 5, CBS will fill the slot "Guiding Light" is vacating with a new edition of the game show "Let's Make a Deal."

___

CBS is a unit of CBS Corp.

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Sunday, September 6, 2009

Michael Jackson's glove auctioned in Australia



MELBOURNE, Australia – A bejeweled white glove Michael Jackson tossed to an Australian fan more than a decade ago sold at auction Sunday for 57,600 Australian dollars ($48,400), almost twice the estimated selling price.

Warwick Stone, a buyer for the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, beat out five other bidders for the late King of Pop's glove, said Charlotte Stanes, spokeswoman for the Melbourne auction house Bonhams and Goodman. The estimated selling price before the auction was AU$30,000.

"We are very happy with the result," Stanes said. "It's the first glove we know about in Australia."

Bonhams and Goodman said it was the first auction of a Michael Jackson glove since his death on June 25 this year at age 50.

Jackson visited Australia in 1996 as part of his HIStory world tour. While in Sydney, he attended the Australian premiere for the film "Ghosts," in which he had a starring role. At the end of the screening, he tossed the glove at audience member Bill Hibble, who has since died, said national head of collectables Giles Moon.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Stars, family honor Michael Jackson at funeral



GLENDALE, California (Reuters) – Michael Jackson was buried on Thursday, more than two months after he died of a drug overdose, marking the last stop for a superstar who spent most of his 50 years in the public gaze.

The singer, whose enormous success with such albums as "Off the Wall" and "Thriller" was overshadowed in later years by his extravagant lifestyle and child molestation allegations, died on June 25 with a mix of prescription medications in his body.

The Los Angeles coroner ruled Jackson's death a homicide. Police are investigating several doctors and have said they will seek criminal charges, but so far none has been filed.

Security was very tight at the private evening funeral at the historic Forest Lawn cemetery in Glendale, California, near Los Angeles.

Fans and reporters were kept away from the 200 guests, including actress Elizabeth Taylor, Motown Records founder Berry Gordy, musician Quincy Jones and Jackson's ex-wife Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley.

The Jackson family entourage was the last to arrive, showing up more than an hour later than scheduled in a convoy of 30 limousines, some members waving to a cheering crowd of more than 400 people.

A few minutes later, a hearse drove through the cemetery accompanied by four police officers on motorcycles.

The outdoor ceremony lasted for about an hour before the pop star was interred in a crypt in the vast mock-Renaissance Grand Mausoleum, a family spokesman said.

The pallbearers were Jackson's five brothers -- Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon and Randy -- who performed similar honors at a public memorial service in July.

ACTORS, LAWYER AT FUNERAL

The ceremony began with Jackson's three children placing a crown on their father's coffin, the spokesman said.

Speakers included Jackson's father Joseph, whom the singer often accused of abusing him as a child, and civil rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton.

Others guests included actors Corey Feldman, Chris Tucker, Macaulay Culkin and his girlfriend Mila Kunis, Thomas Mesereau, the attorney who successfully defended Jackson in his 2005 child molestation trial, and Kenny Ortega, the choreographer on Jackson's planned comeback tour.

Officials have said a cocktail of medications, including the powerful anesthetic propofol and sedative lorazepam were the primary causes of Jackson's death.

While several doctors who treated Jackson have been investigated, police have focused on his personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray, who was at his bedside when he suffered a heart attack in a rented Los Angeles mansion.

Murray was hired by concert promoter AEG Live in the weeks before Jackson's death to watch over him as he rehearsed for a series of comeback concerts in London, scheduled to start in July. Those concerts were to have helped the singer pay off debts and shore up his finances.

Jackson will be in stellar company at Forest Lawn, a stately 290-acre (117-hectare) property that is the final resting place of such Hollywood icons as Walt Disney, Humphrey Bogart, Errol Flynn, Nat "King" Cole and Jimmy Stewart.

The cemetery will reopen to the public on Friday, with private security for Jackson's crypt, said a spokesman for the Glendale Police Department.

The city went to unusual lengths to make sure the funeral went off without a hitch.

Police helicopters with infrared technology started buzzing the cemetery on Wednesday night to make sure no one slipped in. Police dogs, plainclothes officers and private security guards also patrolled the area.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by John O'Callaghan)

Warner Bros. poised to take summer box-office crown



LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Topping the summer box office has become habit-forming at Warner Bros.

Hollywood's summer ends Labor Day, but already it's clear that Warners again will top distributor market-share rankings with $957 million in domestic grosses since the season began May 1, according to Nielsen EDI.

That's down from the studio's "Dark Knight"-fueled $1 billion tally last summer. Still, Warners sits well ahead of the domestic distribution pack year-to-date and is tracking 3 percent ahead of its industry-record haul from a year ago with $1.47 billion and counting.

The studio's seasonal performance has yielded an industry-best market share of 23 percent. Paramount copped the season's silver medal with $874 million so far and a 21 percent share; Disney is third with $604 million and 15 percent.

All told, when receipts are calculated through Labor Day, summer box office will finish north of summer 2007's record $4.16 billion. But with 3D premiums driving a big rise in average ticket prices, there's scant chance of beating summer 2004's admissions record of 642 million tickets sold after accounting for inflation.

Meanwhile, Warners brass say the studio's best is yet to come.

"We have 10 films to release by the end of the year, so it looks to me that we're going to break our record again," Warners domestic distribution president Dan Fellman says. "But we'll have to take it one picture at a time."

"POTTER" POWER

Warners might wish they were all Harry Potter movies. After opening worldwide July 15, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" is on track to become the six-film franchise's first $300 million domestic grosser since the 2001 original.

Though the studio's May 21 release "Terminator Salvation" underperformed with $125 million domestically, pictures produced by Warners' New Line label are proving to be the gift that keeps on giving.

New Line's summer successes included "Ghosts of Girlfriends Past," a modestly budgeted romantic comedy that unspooled May 1 en route to $55 million, and "The Time Traveler's Wife," an August 14 release that has grossed nearly $50 million.

Then there was "The Hangover." A co-production of Warners and Legendary Pictures, the bawdy Vegas comedy managed to overachieve even before hitting theaters. Prerelease buzz was so strong that Warners green-lighted a sequel for release in May 2011.

"There's no question that 'Hangover' was the breakout hit of the summer -- maybe even of all time," Fellman says.

The description hardly is hyperbolic. The $35 million picture has legged past "Beverly Hills Cop" ($235 million) to become the highest-grossing R-rated comedy of all time with $271 million.

'REVENGE' IS SWEET

Paramount had five summer releases, led by the season's top grosser, the DreamWorks-produced "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen," which this weekend will reach $400 million domestically and $829 million globally.

"You have to feel great when you have movies of the caliber of 'Star Trek,' 'G.I. Joe' and 'Transformers,'" Paramount distribution chief Jim Tharp says. "We were a little below the previous summer. But last year we had DreamWorks Animation's 'Kung Fu Panda' in the summer, whereas this year their picture 'Monsters vs. Aliens' went out in March."

Disney executives stress the profitability of their six-film seasonal slate.

"Absolutely, it was a profitable summer for us," Disney film president Mark Zoradi says.

Zoradi declined to say whether the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced "G-Force" ($112 million domestic) will turn a profit. But clearly, Pixar's "Up" ($290 million) and Sandra Bullock-starring "The Proposal" ($160 million) paid off handsomely.

Elsewhere in the summer pecking order, Fox bounced back from a tough 2008 with a solid $591 million through last weekend, good for a 14 percent share. In fifth place, Sony ($524 million; 13 percent share) had a quieter summer, but the Culver City studio avoided major misfires.

OVERSEAS MUSCLE

Fox and Sony also enjoyed outsize international campaigns. Fox's 3D animated threequel "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" padded its $193 million domestic haul with more than three times as much overseas, good for more than $830 million in global box office, and Sony posted a nifty $484 million worldwide tally for its Tom Hanks-starring "Angels & Demons" thanks to $351 million in foreign receipts.

Rounding out domestic rankings among the major studios, Universal ($343 million; 8 percent) suffered a series of disappointments during the summer. Its June 5 release "Land of the Lost" was produced for an estimated $100 million but struggled to register $50 million domestically.

"It was a very disappointing summer for us," Universal marketing and distribution president Adam Fogelson says. "We are all linking arms and doing everything we can to course-correct and to make sure we never have another summer like this."

Indie and specialty distributors found little traction in a season dominated by popcorn movies.

The Weinstein Co.'s late-August bow of Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds" drew intense scrutiny, mainly for its potential effect on the company's fiscal health.

Fortunately for the Weinsteins, "Basterds" has performed well ($75 million domestically). The film's success also serves as an upbeat coda for an industry seeking to believe that movie lovers still love going to the movie house.

Year to date, 2009 heads into summer's final session nearly 4 percent ahead of the same portion of last year, at $7.07 billion.

"Over the past three years, we've had pretty consistent admissions and increasing revenues, coming back from a period when people were talking about the industry being in a downward spiral," National Association of Theater Owners spokesman Patrick Corcoran says. "We're seeing nothing like that now."

Three wide releases hit theaters Friday for the season-concluding holiday frame: Fox's romantic comedy "All About Steve," Lionsgate's sci-fi action picture "Gamer" and Miramax's comedy "Extract." "Steve" is the strongest of the bunch in prerelease polling, thanks to topliner Bullock's recent marquee magic, and should top the session with low-double-digit millions. "Gamer" and "Extract" could get stuck in the single-digit millions.

(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

DJ AM service attendees recount 12-step meeting



LOS ANGELES – Attendees at a service for DJ AM say hundreds of friends gathered at the unique memorial fashioned after a 12-step meeting.

Several guests said attendees participated in the open 12-step process used by recovering addicts in programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous. They requested anonymity because of the nature of the meeting.

Celebrities seen coming and going from the service at the Hollywood Palladium included Lindsay Lohan, Robert Downey Jr., John Mayer and others.

DJ AM, whose real name is Adam Goldstein, was found dead last week in New York. Police officials say pills that appeared to be the powerful painkiller OxyContin were found in his stomach and throat.

Goldstein was a recovering addict working on a reality show to help fellow addicts. He survived a plane crash in South Carolina last year.


Timbaland unleashes his beats in 'Beaterator'



LOS ANGELES Timbaland is not afraid of wannabes stealing his flow.

The producer-singer, who has collaborated with musicians ranging from Justin Timberlake to Nelly, has found a new duet partner in Rockstar Games. Timbaland is teaming up with the developer behind the "Grand Theft Auto" franchise on the handheld music-making application "Beaterator," but the hip-hop impresario doesn't think the app will put him out of a job.

"I can give you everything," he teases, "but you're not gonna think like I would think."

"Beaterator" features nearly 1,300 sounds and loops created by Timbaland and about another 2,000 from the developers at Rockstar Games. The application is split into three modes: Live Play, Studio Sessions and Song Crafter. Unlike rhythm titles like "Guitar Hero" and "Rock Band," there's no game element to "Beaterator." Everything is unlocked from the outset.

Amateur mixmasters can layer vocals, drum machine sounds, kicks, snares, bass loops, synth sounds and a myriad of other noises to create unique beats and melodies. The only game-like aspect of "Beaterator" is Live Play, which allows users to create a song by mashing buttons alongside a virtual Timbaland, who the real Timbaland insists could use some more muscles.

The Grammy winner — whose real name is Tim Mosley — wasn't prepared for how long it took to transform "Beaterator" from a simple application that originally appeared on Rockstar Games' Web site in 2005 into a full-blown beat machine program that will be available for the PlayStation Portable on Sept. 29 and the iPhone and iPod Touch later this fall.

"They broke it down and said, 'Tim, this is not like music. It's gonna take three to four years. Are you prepared for that?'" says Timbaland. "I thought about it just like this — let me try it. And so here we are today. It's all about timing. Sometimes you look at those years and think it's a long time, but it's really not. It's really not."

___

On the Net:

http://www.rockstargames.com/beaterator/

Jason Bateman renewed after being `Arrested'



NEW YORK – As usual, Jason Bateman is calm in the midst of chaos.

Sitting down for lunch at Robert De Niro's Greenwich Hotel in Tribeca, Bateman's 2-year-old daughter, Francesca, wants to play with dad. His wife, Amanda Anka (the daughter of singer Paul Anka), stops by. Publicists want to discuss his appearance later in the evening on Letterman.

But Bateman is composed and serene — just as he was in "Arrested Development" and again is in his new film, "Extract." Both plop him in the middle of a small universe of eccentric characters.

The director of "Extract," Mike Judge, marveled that there's not a hint of nervousness about Bateman on set, "not even close." A life in TV and film has made him unusually at ease amid the bustle of film sets; it's been a kind of home for him ever since his child acting days began at the age of 10.

Asked what he remembers of those days, Bateman says:

"The only thing that really sticks with me is an innate sense, an intangible sense that this is all very normal. And that gives me relaxation and comfort and ease which just simply allows me to let my instincts come out."

Decades after Bateman was a child star on "Little House on the Prairie," "Silver Spoons" and "The Hogan Family," it's clear that another chapter has unfolded in his career. It was spawned by "Arrested Development," the acclaimed but ratings-deprived series that ran for three seasons from 2003-2006.

Since then, Bateman has chosen his roles carefully, charting a revival as an in-demand character actor with impeccable comedic timing. He's played a husband fearful of adulthood in "Juno," a super hero's PR aid in "Hancock" and a sleazy D.C. insider in "State of Play."

In "Extract," he's playing the lead role (as a factory owner undergoing a crisis of conscience) in a film for the first time in 20 years. More big parts are on the way, too, starting with "Up in the Air," an Oscar-hyped film starring George Clooney and due out this fall.

He has a small part in Ricky Gervais' upcoming "The Invention of Lying." Next year, he'll star alongside Jennifer Aniston (an old friend of Bateman's) in the romantic comedy "The Baster," and with Vince Vaughn in "Couples Retreat."

Laying out his career plan, Bateman says he's trying "to figure out a responsible, a respectable way to box-office relevance."

"I feel like I'm now gaining the courage to take a bigger piece of business and see where that takes me," he says.

Bateman speaks thoughtfully and ambitiously about his future; earning respect, he says, is the "fuel for longevity." But he knows it all started with "Arrested Development."

"It put me here, literally," he says. "Without that show, I don't really know what I'd be doing. You couldn't ask for a better resuscitation of one's career than what that show did for me."

Following his youth stardom, Bateman's spent much of his `20s living out his teenage years — drinking too much, having too much fun. His acting career stalled and he became known in the industry for one unsuccessful pilot after another.

Mitchell Hurwitz, the creator of "Arrested Development," didn't think he wanted to make "another Jason Bateman pilot," but he was blown away by the actor's audition.

"He's just a very honest, real actor," says Hurwitz. "I think he'd been — as he often says — performing in some sitcoms instead of acting — which happens to everyone in front of an audience."

Added Hurwitz: "He has the benefit of 30 years experience even though he's 40."

Playing Michael Bluth on "Arrested," Bateman was a marvel of a straight man. Surrounded by an absurd family of characters, he gave the most unadorned performance on the show as a suit-clad do-gooder and single father. But as the show went on, Bateman revealed Bluth to be nearly as flawed and delusional as the rest.

"There's nothing funny about someone who's completely secure," says Bateman. "Vulnerabilities and cracks in the armor are what's funny. And what's really funny is someone who's attempting to hold a shield up to those things and thinking that they're pulling it off."

"Arrested" was hugely acclaimed and Bateman won a Golden Globe in 2005. The show's cult status is firmly lodged now, perfectly illustrated by a photo that recently circulated online of a young man among health care protesters holding up the sign: "Obama, bring back `Arrested Development.'"

(The president may not have seen the sign, but Hurwitz and Bateman did after fellow "Arrested" actor Jeffrey Tambor forwarded it to them. Hurwitz is currently writing an "Arrested Development" film, which the cast has reportedly all signed on for.)

Among Bateman's fans on "Arrested" was Judge ("Beavis and Butt-head," "Office Space").

"It's just funny to watch him react to things," says the writer-director. "He's able to have this crazy stuff going around him but make it all believable. That's harder than it looks and he makes it look easy."

Guest: Many wept during Jackson's funeral



GLENDALE, California – Paris Jackson wept as she stepped into the mausoleum where her father, Michael, was to be entombed. Katherine Jackson, overcome by sorrow, turned back when she was faced with her son's final resting place.

On a sultry Thursday evening, amid a sea of white flowers and with a bejeweled crown placed atop his casket by his children, the King of Pop was given an intimate, private version of the lavish public memorial held shortly after his death in June.

The funeral at Glendale Memorial Park was simple but touching, according to one guest. The person, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the day, said Gladys Knight's performance of the hymn "Our Father" (The Lord's Prayer) soared in the vast mausoleum and moved many to tears.

When it was over, many of the 200 mourners hugged each other. Among them were Elizabeth Taylor, Jackson's ex-wife Lisa Marie Presley, Barry Bonds and Macaulay Culkin.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who gave a eulogy at the public event and at Thursday's service, also extolled Knight's earlier performance of "His Eye is on the Sparrow."

"Gladys Knight sang her heart out. Now we prepare to lay him to rest," Sharpton posted on his Twitter account during the service that was held outside and then within the marble mausoleum.

The mourners followed the crowned, lushly flower-draped casket as Jackson's five brothers — each wearing a bright red tie and a single crystal-studded glove — carried it into the mausoleum. The 11-year-old Paris cried as the group entered the imposing building and was comforted by her aunt, LaToya.

Paris and brothers Prince Michael, 12, and Prince Michael II, 7, known as Blanket, began the service by placing the crown on their father's golden casket. They were composed through most of the hour-and-a-half ceremony.

As it ended, Katherine Jackson appeared extremely weary and had to be helped to her car, according to the guest. Earlier, she had a difficult time going into the mausoleum; she was overcome, turned back, and it wasn't clear if she went in at all, the guest said.

The Jackson family's tardy arrival delayed the service for nearly two hours; no explanation was given to mourners. The invitation notice indicated the service would begin promptly at 7 p.m.; it began closer to 8:30.

The 77-year-old Taylor and others were left waiting in the late summer heat, with the temperature stuck at 90 degrees just before sunset, and some mourners fanned themselves with programs for the service. As darkness fell, police escorted the family's motorcade of 31 cars, including Rolls-Royces and Cadillacs, from their compound in Encino to Forest Lawn, about a 20-minute journey, with the hearse bearing Jackson's body at the end.

About 250 seats were arranged for mourners over artificial turf laid roadside at the mausoleum, and a vivid orange moon, a mark of the devastating wildfire about 10 miles (16 kilometers) distant, hung over the cemetery.

There were two oversized portraits of a youthful, vibrant Jackson mounted next to the casket amid displays of white lilies and roses. At Jackson's lavish public memorial, red roses covered his casket.

A large, blimp-like inflated light, the type used in film and television production, and a boom camera hovered over the seating area placed in front of the elaborate marble mausoleum. The equipment raised the possibility that the footage would be used for the Jackson concert documentary "This Is It," or perhaps the Jackson brothers' upcoming reality show.

More than 400 media credentials were issued to reporters and film crews who remained at a distance from the service and behind barricades. The few clusters of fans who gathered around the secure perimeter that encircled the cemetery entrance struggled to see.

Maria Martinez, 25, a fan from Riverside, California, who was joined by a dozen other Jackson admirers at a gas station near the security perimeter, gave a handful of pink flowers she had picked at a nearby park to a man with an invitation driving into the funeral.

"Can you please put these flowers on his grave?" she told him. "They were small and ugly, but I did that with my heart. I'm not going to be able to get close, so this is as close as I could get to him."

The man consented, adding, "God bless."

Glendale police said all went smoothly and there were no arrests.

Jackson will share eternity at Forest Lawn with the likes of Clark Gable, Jean Harlow and W.C. Fields, entombed alongside them in the mausoleum that will be all but off-limits to adoring fans who might otherwise turn the pop star's grave into a shrine.

The closest the public will be able to get to Jackson's vault is a portion of the mausoleum that displays "The Last Supper Window," a life-size stained-glass re-creation of Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece. Several 10-minute presentations about the window are held regularly 365 days a year, but most of the building is restricted.

The Jackson family had booked an Italian restaurant in Pasadena for a gathering Thursday night, and family members and guests were seen coming and going late into the night.

"I feel like I watched Michael finally given some peace and I made a commitment to make sure his legacy and what he stood for lives on," Sharpton said outside the restaurant around midnight. "So at one level we're relieved; another level we're obligated."

The ceremony ends months of speculation that the singer's body would be buried at Neverland Ranch, in part to make the property a Graceland-style attraction. An amended copy of Jackson's death certificate was filed Thursday in Los Angeles County to reflect Forest Lawn as his final resting place.

In court on Wednesday, it was disclosed that 12 burial spaces were being purchased by Jackson's estate at Forest Lawn Glendale, about eight miles (13 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles, but no details were offered on how they would be used.

The King of Pop died a drug-induced death June 25 at age 50 as he was about to embark on a comeback attempt. The coroner's office has labeled the death a homicide, and Jackson's death certificate lists "injection by another" as the cause.

Dr. Conrad Murray, Jackson's personal physician, told detectives he gave the singer a series of sedatives and the powerful anesthetic propofol to help him sleep. But prosecutors are still investigating, and no charges have been filed.

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AP writers Derrik J. Lang, Anthony McCartney, Sue Manning, Sandy Cohen and Ryan Pearson and APTV reporter John Mone contributed to this report.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

YouTube may stream movie rentals



NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Online video site YouTube is in talks with several major movie studios about renting movies to users by streaming the movies over the Internet according to a person familiar with the talks on Wednesday.

It would mark the first time the world's most popular video site would charge its users to watch videos.

YouTube, which is owned by Internet search giant Google Inc, has held discussions with Lions Gate Entertainment Corp, Sony Pictures, a unit of Sony Corp, and Time Warner Inc's Warner Brothers about online movie rentals, the person said.

In many cases, the movies would be available for rental for a fee in a system similar to Web rental programs from Apple Inc's iTunes, Netflix and Amazon.com with newer movies. YouTube would likely charge a similar fee around $3.99 a rental.

YouTube, which is the world's No.1 video website, currently offers video for free, on an advertising-supported basis.

It currently has a range of archive movies, TV shows and promotional clips from the three named studios and other partners on its site.

"We hope to expand on both our great relationship with the movie studios and the selection and types of videos we offer our community," said YouTube spokesman Chris Dale.

YouTube is in the midst of talks and negotiations with a wide range of media content partners as it ramps up efforts to build a substantial library of current and archive professional movies and videos that it can monetize.

The site, best known as a place to seek out fun videos uploaded by users that feature themes such as skateboarding dogs and dancing babies, recently started to emphasize a growing amount of professional videos.

Advertisers are believed to favor professionally made videos over those of users. Hulu, a video site owned by News Corp, Walt Disney Co and NBC Universal, has had relative success attracting both users and advertisers with a range of full-length TV shows and older movies.

Last month, YouTube announced a partnership with Time Warner Inc properties including CNN and TNT. It agreed a similar deal in March with Walt Disney.

YouTube owner Google has come under growing criticism from Wall Street analysts and investors concerned the expense of serving millions of videos to users around the world everyday is costing the company more money than it earns from advertising.

(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke and Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Andre Grenon)

Star-filled mausoleum awaits Michael Jackson



GLENDALE, Calif. – One month after a lavish public memorial for Michael Jackson, the pop singer's family prepared to inter him privately Thursday in a mausoleum filled with legendary entertainers.

On Wednesday, a judge said Jackson's estate will bear the funeral costs, which were characterized by an attorney as "extraordinary." It was disclosed in court that 12 burial spaces were being purchased at Forest Lawn Glendale, about eight miles north of downtown Los Angeles, but no details were offered on how they would be used.

Jackson will rest in the cemetery's Great Mausoleum with Hollywood stars including Clark Gable, Jean Harlow and W.C. Fields.

Jackson's funeral won't end the legal drama over his drug-induced death at age 50, which authorities have labeled a homicide. No criminal charges have been filed over his June 25 death, which came on the cusp of London concerts meant to restore Jackson to his once-incandescent stardom.

Last week, coroner's officials said they believed Jackson's death was homicide, and his death certificate has been amended to reflect that. It cites "injection by another" as the fatal injury.

Investigators have said a mix of the powerful anesthetic propofol and another sedative killed the pop singer. The new record lists "acute propofol intoxication" as the main cause of death and "benzodiazepine effect" as another significant contributor.

The certificate does not mention Dr. Conrad Murray, who was Jackson's personal physician. He told detectives that he gave the singer a series of sedatives and propofol to try to help him sleep.

The coroner's determination of homicide makes it easier for prosecutors to seek criminal charges, but does not necessarily mean a crime was committed.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Sex, scandal, yawn: Madoff books are a bust



NEW YORK – Sex and scandal have not been enough to make major sellers out of books about Bernard Madoff.

According to Nielsen BookScan, neither a much-discussed tell-all by alleged ex-mistress Sheryl Weinstein nor a recent wave of biographies about the imprisoned financier have caught on with the public.

Weinstein's "Madoff's Other Secret," a tabloid favorite published last month by St. Martin's Press, has sold just 2,000 copies.

Jerry Oppenheimer's "Madoff With the Money" has sold 1,000. Gerard and Deborah Strober's "Catastrophe" and Andrew Kirtzman's "Betrayal" each sold 3,000. Erin Arvedlund's "Too Good To Be True" has been slightly more successful, selling 5,000 copies.

Nielsen BookScan tracks about 70-75 percent of the market.

Oprah Winfrey to dedicate show to Michael Jackson



CHICAGO Talk show host Oprah Winfrey plans to dedicate an upcoming episode of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" to late pop singer Michael Jackson.

Harpo Productions announced Wednesday the episode, to air Sept. 16, will feature excerpts from Winfrey's 1993 interview with Jackson. Jackson died June 25 in Los Angeles. His death has been ruled a homicide.

A release from Harpo Productions says Winfrey will remember "the King of Pop with never-before-revealed personal details" from the interview.

The 24th season of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" premieres Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 14 and 15, with a two-part interview with singer Whitney Houston.

___

On the Net:

http://www.oprah.com


Deep sea diver takes plunge into fiction



SYDNEY (Reuters) – Deep-sea commercial diver Michael Ganas spent four years writing a novel that combined his love of engineering and the sea, but ended up publishing it himself because he found it hard to get anyone else interested.

Ganas' debut novel, "The Girl Who Rode Dolphins," which has won four awards, is set in Haiti where a former Navy Seal teams up with a marine biologist to find a ship that sank 21 years ago but ends up discovering a girl living with dolphins.

American Ganas, a professional engineer who served as a helicopter crew chief in the Vietnam War, said he began writing nearly 20 years ago with technical articles in trade magazines but had always dabbled with fiction.

His wife's battle with chronic myeloid leukemia inspired him to write a novel and dedicate it to her, while the leading female in his science-fiction adventure is based on his daughter.

Ganas spoke to Reuters about getting started in a tough industry:

Q: What got you writing?

A: "I have written a lot of articles over the years and been published in magazines, but they mostly were technical. Writing was just a sideline. I wrote a little fiction that was printed in a magazine, but I have always been an engineer and a diver."

Q: Why now for a novel?

A: "Writing the novel was done over a period of four years concurrent with my job. One of the primary reasons I wrote it was to honor my wife, who has been battling leukemia for the past nine years. As I wrote the novel I would write a little bit and show it to her, and she could not wait to read the next segment."

Q: Will you continue writing?

A: "There will be a sequel to it and other novels down the road. When I finally retire maybe I will write full-time."

Q: Did you set out to write such a long novel, 724 pages?

A: "No. The story was ad-libbed from beginning to end. As I wrote this novel I kept envisaging what I would like to see on the big screen in a blockbuster movie. There are 22 action scenes in the book, but it has layers as well, with philosophical viewpoints. It is deep and not just an action adventure, but the action is intense and it runs to 323,000 words. Most book publishers like a new author to stick to 100,000 words, but I went way over that."

Q: Was that why you decided to self-publish?

A: "With most publishers, when you are an unknown, it is hard to get their attention, so I self-published. Literary agents seem to be all clones of one another and don't see the forest for the trees. As the novel was advancing I was trying to get the attention of publishers and mainstream publishing houses ... but my impression is that if you are unpublished, you are unworthy in their eyes."

Q: Have the awards won you more attention?

A: "I'm not able to gauge if they have changed me in publishing eyes, but it is gratifying as people are seeing something in my writing that the literary agents are not, probably because (the agents) are not reading the material."

Q: Any progress on the sequel and lessons from your debut?

A: "The next book will probably be called "Dolphin Riders." It is going to be a lot shorter than the first one, maybe 120,000 or 130,000 words. I will try to write the next one in maybe a year and a half. But when I go back and read my first book, I am very happy with how it came out. I am always going to look at the first novel as a masterpiece."

Q: When do you find time to write with a full-time job?

A: "In the late evenings, maybe watching the news, I would have a pad in front of me for notes and when I had the time I would transfer it into a manuscript. At weekends I would write a lot. It was a goal, and you could easily let that goal slip away, but you have to stay focused. As I was nearing the end I could see the light at the end of the tunnel."

(Editing by Miral Fahmy)

Venice opens with sentimental Sicily drama



VENICE (Reuters) – The Venice film festival opened on Wednesday with big-budget Italian movie "Baaria," a sentimental sweep through 20th century Sicily taking in Fascism, war, Communism and the mafia.

Billed as one of Italy's most expensive movies costing 25 million euros ($36 million), the first home-made film to open Venice for around 20 years kicked off 11 days of screenings, photo shoots, parties and red carpet glamour on the Lido island.

Director Giuseppe Tornatore, whose 1988 movie "Cinema Paradiso" won a foreign film Oscar, said the story of a poor family living through the upheaval of the last century was partly based on his own memories of life in Sicily.

He told reporters ahead of the official evening premiere that he wanted to use his birthplace as a microcosm of what was happening in the wider world.

"It might be any other place," he said, speaking through an interpreter. "The idea was not to tell the story of Sicily. The idea was to tell the story of a number of characters in the microcosm of a small town, hearing the echoes of what was happening around the town and far from that town."

And so Peppino, the central character played by Francesco Scianna, joins the Communist movement, travels to the Soviet Union where he sees first hand what it really means for citizens there and lives briefly in France seeking work.

But Sicily's passionate people also play a prominent part in a sumptuously shot film set amid olive groves, rugged hills and the ever-changing streets of Baaria.

Actress Eva Mendes and director Ang Lee, who is president of the jury in Venice, walked along the opening night red carpet, cheered on by hundreds of fans.

HOLLYWOOD HITS TOWN

While Venice organizers would welcome an Italian hit after home-grown films generally flopped in recent years, the success of the festival will be judged as much by how many Hollywood stars turn up and the quality of the movies they bring.

The early signs are promising, with Matt Damon, Michael Moore, Nicolas Cage, George Clooney, Oliver Stone, Richard Gere and Sylvester Stallone among those due to walk the red carpet.

The cinema complex on the Lido waterfront is being re-built in a 100-million euro makeover designed to drag the world's oldest film festival into the 21st century and help it compete with other festivals, notably Toronto, with which it overlaps.

On Thursday Viggo Mortensen comes with "The Road," based on author Cormac McCarthy's bleak, post-apocalyptic vision of the world which also stars Charlize Theron.

Damon appears in "The Informant!" as a crooked company whistleblower, and Moore brings "Capitalism: A Love Story," a documentary attacking corporate greed amid the recession.

As well as economic meltdown, dominant themes this year include horror, with George Romero presenting "Survival of the Dead," and animation in the form of a lifetime award for "Toy Story" and "Cars" creator John Lasseter.

Clooney, who has a home in Italy and is a local favorite, appears in "The Men Who Stare at Goats," about a reporter who stumbles across a U.S. military unit in Iraq which employs paranormal powers on its missions.

Cage appears in Werner Herzog's "Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans," a remake of the 1992 movie directed by Abel Ferrara, who has publicly criticized the new version.

Britain's Blair hopping the pond for Letterman



NEW YORKTony Blair is set for his first appearance on David Letterman's "Late Show."

CBS says the former British prime minister will visit the late-night host on Tuesday for his first appearance on the show.

He's likely to talk about his current projects, including pushing for peace with Palestinians and seeking a climate change agreement.

He also has a foundation that tries to promote understanding among different religions and is teaching at Yale University.

Also on Letterman that night will be actress Julianna Margulies (MAR'-goo-leez), who is promoting her new series on CBS.

Cate Blanchett suffers head wound on stage



SYDNEY – Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett suffered a bleeding head wound when she was hit by a prop on stage Wednesday during a Sydney theater performance.

The performance of Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" was canceled, but the 40-year-old Australian actress will return to the stage for Thursday's show, Sydney Theater Company spokesman Tim McKeough said.

"Another actor lifted the prop above his head, and she somehow sustained a minor blow to the head," McKeough said.

An audience member told Sydney's Macquarie Radio it soon became clear the accident was not part of the play.

"She had blood streaming down the back of her head and blood on the back of her neck," the unnamed theater-goer said.

Sydney Theater Company is run by Blanchett and her playwright husband, Andrew Upton.

Blanchett, who won a supporting actress Oscar in 2005 for "The Aviator," is playing the lead role of Blanche DuBois.

ABC News: Gibson retiring, Sawyer will be anchor



NEW YORK Charles Gibson, who provided a steadying hand to a "World News" broadcast reeling from tragedy, will retire at the end of the year and ABC News appointed Diane Sawyer on Wednesday to replace him in January.

Gibson, 66, said he had been planning to retire at the end of 2007 but events compelled him to stay. He was named anchor following the death of Peter Jennings and the wartime injury of Bob Woodruff in 2006. He's been at ABC News for 35 years and says he plans to continue as an occasional contributor.

Sawyer's elevation means that, with Katie Couric at CBS, two of the three leading anchors for the broadcast networks will be women.

Gibson's comforting presence made him an instant ratings hit at "World News" at a time the other networks had much younger anchors. But NBC's Brian Williams eventually passed him by and has been leading in the ratings for the past year, with "World News" a solid second.

"The program is now operating at a very accelerated, but steady, cruising speed and I think it is an opportune time for a transition — both for the broadcast and for me," Gibson said in an e-mail to fellow ABC News staffers. "Life is dynamic; it is not static."

Sawyer was the obvious choice for a successor, said ABC New President David Westin. The 63-year-old newswoman has a lengthy resume that includes a stint on "60 Minutes" and competing with Barbara Walters for big news interviews in the 1990s. She's done several documentaries in the past few years, including close looks at poverty in America.

Yet her departure leaves a hole at ABC's "Good Morning America," where she was the show's centerpiece and co-host with Robin Roberts. ABC had no immediate announcement on what will happen on that show, though in-house candidates like Bill Weir and Chris Cuomo would be prospects to take a larger role. Morning news is dominated by NBC's "Today" show, but a further slip from its second-place status would be costly for "GMA" and its parent Walt Disney Co.

While Walters, Connie Chung and Elizabeth Vargas predated Couric as women who anchored network evening news programs, none were given the job solely until Couric. Sawyer's hiring is a "watershed moment," said the Women's Media Center.

"Diane Sawyer's expertise and professionalism are without question," said Carol Jenkins, president of the Women's Media Center. "We look forward to her debut in January, and to the changes in the perceptions of women's capabilities her reign will bring."

Gibson's biggest impact at ABC has been when he stepped into the breach during times of need.

He spent 11 years as co-host of "Good Morning America" before stepping down in 1998. But with the program imploding in the ratings, David Westin asked him to come back and team with Sawyer. What was envisioned as a stopgap of a few months lasted until mid-2006.

After Peter Jennings died of cancer in 2005, Westin replaced him with an anchor team of Woodruff and Vargas. But after Woodruff was seriously hurt in a wartime injury and Vargas became pregnant, Gibson was asked to take over.

"What I value the most is that he really did bring a sense of calm and stability to a broadcast that really needed it," Westin said.

Gibson is passionate about the news but is also able to bring the right tone to a story, Westin said. The Princeton graduate has a more buttoned-down style than Couric and Williams, yet he ends the broadcast with a personal note to viewers: "I hope you had a good day."

Gibson had the first TV interview with GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin in 2008, where she answered a question about insights into Russian policy by noting that you can see the country from Alaska. With Gibson as anchor, ABC News beat its broadcast rivals in the ratings on the night Barack Obama was elected president.

Westin said Gibson had approached him earlier this summer about retiring and he was asked to think it over. ABC had no desire to see him leave: "We were very happy with Charlie," Westin said. "He was doing a terrific job."

Yet Gibson was insistent. His wife, Arlene, had recently retired as a school administrator and Gibson's only grandchild had moved with his daughter and son-in-law to Seattle over the past year.

"This has not been an easy decision to make," Gibson said. "This has been my professional home for almost 35 years. And I love this news department, and all who work in it, to the depths of my soul."

Sawyer called the job "an enormous honor."

"Diane is one of the hardest-working people I know and this new assignment is the latest achievement in an already accomplished and illustrious career," said Couric, who competed against Sawyer as a host of NBC's "Today" show. "And as I did, I'm sure that she'll quickly find that she doesn't miss that early morning alarm clock."

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Shania Twain tells fans she's moved on, after split



LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Country singer Shania Twain is feeling like a woman again, returning to the spotlight with a new man by her side after her marriage broke up last year.

Twain, 44, separated from her husband of 14 years, record producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange, just over a year ago after he had an affair, ending a highly lucrative partnership in which Lange produced the Canadian star's three blockbuster albums.

But after largely disappearing from the public eye for a year, Twain is back, set to appear as a guest judge on television singing contest "American Idol" during auditions this week.

In a letter addressed to fans on her website, which is accompanied by a video, Twain said she spent the past year traveling, reading, sharing time with her son 8-year-old Eja, and "concentrating on moving on and forward."

"I hit a very big bump in the road," said Twain, whose marriage broke down after her husband was reported to be having an affair with longtime secretary and manager of the couple's Swiss chateau, Marie-Anne Thiebaud.

Twain said she has now made a point of surrounding herself with loving people whom she could trust, referring particularly to a man called "Fred" described as a constant companion who understood her pain as his own family had split up under "the same extreme circumstances."

Her companion is Frederic Thiebaud, the husband of Marie-Anne Thiebaud.

"We leaned on one another through the ups and downs, taking turns holding each other up. We've become stronger and closer through it all, as have our children Eja and Johanna (Fred's 8-year-old daughter)," said Twain.

"When I reflect on it all, it's clear how remarkably active my life has been since last December -- a time in the life of someone working hard to "move on" and succeeding."

Twain made no mention of when she would be out with some new music.

(Writing by Belinda Goldsmith, Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Imelda Marcos dreams of return to power



MANILA (AFP) – Twenty years after the death of her controversial husband, former Philippines first lady Imelda Marcos still dreams of a return to power but this time with her son as president.

"Yes, I am egging him... I am practically pushing him to run for a higher office," the energetic and immaculately dressed 80-year-old told AFP when asked if she wanted Ferdinand Marcos Jnr to lead the Southeast Asian nation.

Marcos Jnr, 51, only son of the late strongman Ferdinand Marcos, has already forged a successful political career that has been partly based on his parents' enduring strengths and alliances.

He served as governor of the northern Philippines' Ilocos Norte province, his father's former stronghold, for 12 years and is currently an opposition member of the nation's lower house of parliament.

While acknowledging all mothers were proud of their sons, Mrs Marcos said she had many special reasons to boast about hers.

"He has done great miracles in Ilocos," she said in an exclusive interview on Monday from her double-storey penthouse apartment in a luxury suburb of Manila.

She said that among his many achievements while governor of Ilocos, the man nicknamed "Bongbong" had built hundreds of kilometres (miles) of roads, ensured all the poor had access to medical services and tripled average incomes.

"Bongbong, I am very proud of him. He can qualify for anything," she said.

There is speculation that Marcos Jnr will run for the Senate in next year's national elections, but he has not publicly announced any ambitions to lead the nation of 92 million people.

There is no clear front-runner among the more than a dozen candidates who have said they may enter the running to succeed President Gloria Arroyo, who is constitutionally mandated to step down next year.

However Mrs Marcos did not say when she hoped her son, educated at Oxford University and the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Business School, would assume the nation's highest office.

Marcos Snr remains one of Asia's most controversial and divisive figures despite two decades having passed since his death in exile on September 21, 1989.

He ruled the Philippines from 1965 until being ousted by a "people power" revolution in 1986 that forced him and his family to flee to the United States.

His critics accuse him of plundering billions of dollars from government coffers and presiding over widespread human rights abuses.

His wife's famously extravagant clothes and lifestyle were regarded as one of the most powerful symbols of the couple's excesses, however she insisted she and her husband have nothing to apologise for.

"Marcos was no dictator," she said before launching into a defence of the martial law that her husband introduced in 1972 to stay in power.

After returning to the Philippines following her husband's death, Mrs Marcos made a failed bid for the presidency in 1992.

And unsullied by any conviction for committing a crime during her husband's reign, she believes she still has much to offer her country.

Mrs Marcos said she harboured ambitions of a top government post in her son's administration that would put her in charge of overseeing basic services for the Philippines' 42,000 villages, known as 'barangays'.

She said the reason she was pushing her son to become president was that: "I want him to appoint me as 'mother of the barangay' at one peso (two cents) a year salary".

"Marcos has already institutionalised politics in the family," she said of her husband.

"What I want to do is simultaneously go to the barangay... and bring basic services there so that people will not be deprived of care and attention. I just want to be mama of the barangays."