Monday, March 31, 2008
“We take eighteen ounces of sizzling ground beef, and soak it in rich, creamery butter, then we top it off with bacon, ham, and a fried egg. We call it the Good Morning Burger.”
I remember seeing this pile of awesomeness on an old Simpsons episode back in the day. Sure it’s probably been done a bunch of times but I have yet to see any good photos online. Out of my curiousity I present the Good Morning Burger- Grocery Eats style.
As the advertisement reads, we start off with 18 ounces of ground beef.
Topped off with 5 slices of american cheese and 8 slices of bacon.
Fried 4 eggs. (note the double yolk action- JACKPOT!)
Added 2 slices of deli ham and placed it on a buttered/toasted King’s Hawaiian Sweet Bread bun (whole loaf slice length-wise with some of the middle section removed).
Just add Tums.
It was pretty damn good even lacking condiments; but honestly, it’s just a big burger. The real deal here is the King’s Hawaiian bun cause that made this shit what it was. Next time I’ll just use the smaller King’s rolls and make cheeseburger sliders.
For burgers with eggs on them, I still ride for the Royal Red Robin. Much better IMO.
Poison Drummer Nabbed On Rape Charge
by Paul Cashmere - March 28 2008
Every rose has a thorn for Poison drummer Rikki Rocket . Rocket, (aka Richard Ream), was taken into custody on Monday when he returned to Los Angeles after playing in New Zealand.
The 46 year old drummer was charged with sexual assault when he was going through customs and taken to the LA County Jail.
The charge related to an alleged incident that happened in September, 2007 at the Silver Star Casino. An unnamed woman claims that Rikki had a rocket in his pocket and that it was aimed at her.
Rocket may face extradition to Mississippi to face the charges.
Poison was in New Zealand for the Rock 2 Wellington festival. The band shared the bill with Ozzy Osbourne, Alice Cooper and Whitesnake.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Above is Asia Argento...Dario's Daughter.
Dario Argento was born in Rome, the son of film producer Salvatore Argento and Brazilian fashion model Elda Luxardo. He started his career in film as a critic, writing for various magazines while still attending high school. He did not attend college, electing rather to take a job as a columnist at the newspaper Paese Sera.
While working at the newspaper, Argento started screenwriting. His most notable work was for Sergio Leone, collaborating with Bernardo Bertolucci on the story for the spaghetti western classic Once Upon a Time in the West. Soon after its release in 1969, Argento wrote and directed his first movie, The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, which was released in 1970 and was a major hit in Italy.
His directing style was influenced by Mario Bava, Lucio Fulci, Riccardo Freda, Sergio Leone, Alfred Hitchcock, Michelangelo Antonioni, and Federico Fellini.
Early in his directing career, he continued to concentrate largely on the giallo genre (more precisely known as "thrilling" in Italy, as the word "giallo" usually refers to generic mystery works [it actually means "yellow" in Italian]). The films, like the lurid yellow-covered murder-mystery novels they were inspired by, followed the suspense tradition of hardboiled American detective fiction while incorporating baroque scenes of violence and excess. While Mario Bava is credited with inventing the giallo film, Argento's passion in developing the genre has earned him widespread recognition as the key influence in popularising giallo cinema outside of Italy, and his unique vision has earned him acclaim as an 'auteur' director.
Argento directed two further successful thrillers, The Cat o' Nine Tails (1971) and Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1972). Alongside The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, these initial three films are frequently referred to as Argento's "animal trilogy". The director then turned his attention away from giallo movies, filming two Italian TV dramas and a period comedy (Five Days in Milan) in 1973 before returning to thrillers with 1975's Deep Red, frequently cited by many critics as the best giallo ever made. The film made Argento famous internationally, and inspired a number of other directors to work in the genre (John Carpenter has frequently referred to the influence Argento's early work had on Halloween). It also marked the start of Argento's long creative relationship with composer Claudio Simonetti and his Italian progressive rock group Goblin.
Argento's next movie, Suspiria (1977), an extremely violent supernatural thriller, is considered by many fans to be his best work, alongside Deep Red. Freed from the constraints of the more conventional giallo format, Suspiria is a semi-surreal work of art, where plot and character become secondary to sound and vision. Argento planned for Suspiria to be the first of a trilogy about "The Three Mothers", three ancient witches residing in three different modern cities. The second movie of the trilogy was 1980's Inferno, which went even further towards pure art. However, so far he has not completed the trilogy. In an interview at the 2003 Trieste Film Festival, Argento reportedly said that he was working on the third movie of the trilogy, to start filming in August 2004. However, subsequent reports indicated that financing problems prevented the film's production from proceeding.
Poster for Suspiria.
In-between the two "mothers", in 1978 Argento collaborated with George Romero on Dawn of the Dead, earning a producer credit on the zombie classic. Argento oversaw the European release of the film (where it was titled Zombi) which was much shorter and featured much more of the score written and performed by Goblin.
After Inferno, Argento returned to more conventional giallo with Tenebrae (1982). Then attempted to combine giallo and supernatural fantasy together in Phenomena, also known as Creepers (1985), which was one of Jennifer Connelly's first movies. Phenomena also showed Argento's predilection for using new technology, with its many prowling Steadicam shots. Both of these movies received a lukewarm reception upon release (although each has been re-appraised retrospectively).
Argento subsequently took a break from directing to write two screenplays for Mario Bava's son Lamberto Bava, Demoni (1985) and Demoni 2 (1986).
Opera followed in 1987, and was, according to Argento, a "very unpleasant experience". Set in Parma's Regio Theatre during a production of Verdi's Macbeth, the movie was beset in real life by misfortunes that Argento suspected were caused by the traditional "curse" on Macbeth. Argento's father died during the production, Vanessa Redgrave dropped out of the project before filming began, he had problems working with his former long-time girlfriend and collaborator Daria Nicolodi on-set, and the cast and crew were plagued by minor accidents and mishaps. The movie was again not particularly well received by fans or critics, despite showcasing Argento's skill with color and composition, and featuring some technically impressive camera movements (the ravens' descent in the Parma opera house is considered to be one of the director's most famous set pieces).
It is widely accepted that his 1990s career and onwards has failed to live up to his golden period between Deep Red and Opera. Despite a disappointing collaboration with George A. Romero on an Edgar Allan Poe anthology entitled Two Evil Eyes (1990), an unsuccessful stab at a mainstream Hollywood production (Trauma of 1993) and a disastrous version of Phantom of the Opera (1998) which lost him many fans, he continued to innovate. For example, his 1996 The Stendhal Syndrome, in which a policewoman (played by Argento's daughter, Asia) who suffers from a dramatized version of the illness is trapped by a serial killer in an abandoned warehouse, was the first Italian film to use computer-generated imagery (CGI). Furthermore, the opening of The Stendhal Syndrome was shot in Florence, at Italy's famed Uffizi Gallery, Argento being the only director ever granted permission to shoot there.
Many saw 2001's Sleepless, deliberately designed as a "comeback movie" with its strong giallo theme and numerous references to his earlier work, as a step back in the right direction. However, Argento's follow-up, 2004's The Card Player, a giallo about a killer whose murders are conducted during Internet poker matches with the Rome police, earned a mixed reception: fans appreciated the techno music score composed by ex-Goblin member Claudio Simonetti, but felt the film was too mainstream, with little of Argento's usual flourish.
2005 saw the TV broadcast of Argento's Do You Like Hitchcock?, in which the Italian horror-meister paid homage to Alfred Hitchcock after decades of being compared to him by critics. Later that year, he directed a segment of Masters of Horror, a Showtime television series. The story, "Jenifer", based on an old Eerie comics tale by Bruce Jones, was a departure for Argento, but provided him with some of his best critical notices in several years. Author F. Paul Wilson (The Keep, Repairman Jack) has stated recently that Argento will be directing an adaptation of his short story "Pelts" for season 2 of the series.
It has been confirmed that Dario Argento has begun pre-production on his newest film, the conclusion of his Three Mothers Trilogy, under the working title Mother Of Tears. The last movie of the trilogy was released in 1980 and fans have been waiting ever since. The film will be set in Rome and will center around Mater Lachrymarum. Dario himself and Jace Anderson share writing credits for this movie. A joint effort between the Itallian Studio, Medusa, and the American Studio, Myriad Pictures (which made Jeepers Creepers) will finance the production of the film giving it a large budget, at least compared to his earlier work, and Max Von Sydow has signed on to play an as yet unknown role.
Let's say you just won $48.6 million. What would be the first thing you would do? Me? After pissing my pants, I'd run around town throwing hundred bills at squirrels. Then come back under the cover of darkness and kick their asses until they gave it back. As for Heather Mills the first thing she did is hire forensic accountants to pore over Paul McCartney's assets because, apparently, she can't get by on $48.6 million. Of course, she's mainly concerned about her daugher Bea. I mean, how can she raise a child on such meager funds? The Daily Mail reports:
"Heather's thinking is that Bea should not be seen to have a different lifestyle when she is with Heather compared to Paul - and she is going about proving that is not possible. "Heather is hoping Paul will discretely make a payment to her annually rather than want to go back to court and rake all this up again."
I don't want to point fingers and call Heather Mills a gold digger. But if you opened the trunk of her car you'd probably find a pick ax and, let's be real, a dead prospector. I'm not saying Heather Mills strangled him for his claim, but I'm also not saying he wasn't beaten with a wooden leg.
No Thanks, I Will Take My Own Home Theater Instead...
March 26, 2008 - Village Roadshow Gold Class Cinemas are coming to the U.S. The company will expand their luxury, premium venues to around 50 locations in the States over the next five years.
The cinemas offer personalized levels of service; smaller more private and intimate cinemas; customer designed recliner seating with footrests, and state of the art projection and sound systems. They'll have digital 2-D and 3-D capability, as well as a lounge area and bar where cocktails and appetizers will be served. And if that's not enough, a concierge service and valet parking are available.
Here's the kicker: Admission will cost you around $35. And, of course, the food and drink are extra.
The first of the posh new venues will open up in the burbs of Chicago and Seattle in October. The company then plans to build more near Dallas-Fort Worth and Scottsdale, Arizona. Future expansion is expected in California, Florida, Nevada, Pennsylvania and New York. The complexes will be located in high-end retail centers.
Village Roadshow has operated Gold Class Cinemas in Australia for years, expanding more recently to Singapore and Greece. Will the idea catch on in the U.S.? Would you pay for it? Leave your comments below...
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Monday, March 24, 2008
Deep Fried Pancakes...I Stole This From GroceryEats.Com.
I finally got my hands on some Batter Blaster. When the internet first told me about this shit I couldn’t believe it, fucking pancake batter in a bottle. This shit is fucking organic too! I copped it at Whole Foods, they keep them in the refrigeration aisle. Batter Blaster is cute cause you get to shoot it on the pan but that’s for kids. I wanted to spray this shit in my deep fryer for some real magic. These are the results.
The dynamic duo
this is my first attempt. It failed because the batter blaster shoots out in a stream so it turns into funnel cake, not so much pancake.
After these results I decided that I should pour the batter into a measuring cup and just dump the shit into the fryer. This worked out much better.
made a triple stack and poured syrup on top
At this point I began to debate if it was really worth it. But then I thought of Grocery and his loss to the MacChicken. I wasn’t going to let some bitch ass pancakes take me out the game so I bossed the fuck up and manned that shit
Over all the batter itself was kind of good but the problem with the pancakes was so much grease. Shit was hella oily. I was thinking maybe I should mix water into the batter so that slows the oil from penetrating the pancakes so much but I don’t know how well that would work.
Would I do this again? FUCK NO. My stomach is kind of on smash right now and I had to pound some antioxidants to help me feel better. Salad is a necessary after that shit. I basically ate a heart attack, but I’m glad I did it.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Somethin' filled up
my heart with nothin',
someone told me not to cry.
But now that I'm older,
my heart's colder,
and I can see that it's a lie.
Children wake up,
hold your mistake up,
before they turn the summer into dust.
If the children don't grow up,
our bodies get bigger but our hearts get torn up.
We're just a million little gods causin' rain storms turnin' every good thing to
rust.
I guess we'll just have to adjust.
With my lightnin' bolts a glowin'
I can see where I am goin' to be
when the reaper he reaches and touches my hand.
With my lightnin' bolts a glowin'
I can see where I am goin’
With my lightnin' bolts a glowin'
I can see where I am, go-go, where I am
You'd better look out below
Austin Chronicle: Your new single, "Gangsta Rap Made Me Do It," is the rawest and most political thing you've done since The Predator. What made you jump back into political rap?
Ice Cube: In rap the styles change so quick, and political rap became unpopular for a time. The last thing you want in rap is to do songs that nobody's really checking. It started in the Death Row era when political rap went to the back burner. I believe places like Viacom and outlets for the music decided that we had to shy away from the political rap and go more with the gangsterism kind of rap. It was a shift in the taste of the public. Now I think we're past that, and people want to hear messages in the music. I think what's turned people off from rap in the last 10 years is the fact that it's filled with nothing. It's time to go back.
AC: And the political climate of today has something to do with that?
IC: Of course. When the Republicans are in office, everything gets a little more tense. It's a little harder, and you can really feel the pressure of government on top of the people. People want solutions or outlets, so ultimately people want you to say through your lyrics what they can't say.
AC: Are you backing any presidential candidates?
IC: I like Obama. He's a breath of fresh air. He wants to unify the country and not divide it. He just seems like the right guy.
AC: Musically, the new album also seems like it's back to basics. It's dark; it's rugged; it's really raw. Is that a response to what's happening in hip-hop or in the wider music industry?
IC: That's just how I do it. That's how I like it. I like it raw, and that's the name of my album, Raw Footage. That's just my take.
AC: A lot's changed since you did Straight Outta Compton. You're almost 40 years old, you're a father now, and you have a lot more money than you did back then. Does that change the way you approach making music?
IC: Not necessarily, no. All those things are true, but I never think about that when I'm writing lyrics or when I'm in the studio. I'm not thinking about my kids or money or any of that stuff. I'm thinking about being the greatest MC I can be. I think people might perceive things as changing, but I had to roll with the times, the tide of the hip-hop audience, to still be relevant as an MC after all these years. Now I'm at a point where people really want to hear the type of rap that I really love to do. So I'm back in my comfort zone when it comes to making music.
AC: Who do you think dictates what audiences want to hear?
IC: Things change. When Lawrence Taylor played linebacker, he changed the way the position is played. Whenever a new rapper comes out and is as big as Snoop or Eminem, they change the tone or the flavor of the audience. Sugarhill Gang and Grandmaster Flash came out and changed the tone. Run-DMC changed the tone. Beastie Boys came out and changed the tone. Public Enemy came in and changed the tone. N.W.A, Ice-T, and Eazy-E changed the tone. It's always going to be like that.
AC: Do you see any contradiction in recording a raw gansta track one day and shooting a G-rated family film the next?
IC: Music and film are totally different. As far as my music, I don't have A&R or anything like that, so my music is totally self-inspired. Movies are put together by hundreds of people, so it's not one man, one thought. It's a whole different thing. Me acting in a movie is not what I'm becoming; it's a job. Records is what I love to do. I've made a lot of money, and as far as me and my family, we're fine. If I was thinking about that, I wouldn't even be doing records. I'm more concerned with people who ain't got it like me and still live in South Central L.A., like friends and family who are still caught up in the day-to-day grit and grime of life. They don't have a voice. No one speaks for them.
AC: You've been a savvy businessman ever since a contract dispute back in the N.W.A days. What advice would you offer young artists on how to navigate the industry?
IC: You've gotta get someone you trust as far as legal representation. That's the most important thing to have, because you're not going to be able to navigate through this business without having a legal adviser. I think what a young person needs to do is make sure everything makes sense. Sometimes lawyers can talk the way lawyers talk, and you've got to tell them to make it make sense to you. You've got to tell them what you want, because he works for you.
AC: Your new single has a really poignant line: "Look at my life; Ice Cube is a miracle." What do you mean?
IC: It means coming from nothing and turning it into something. To me, everything about my life is a miracle. It's an example of what you can do with yourself. Recognize your opportunities, and don't be scared of failure or what your limitations are.
AC: Do you find that you're more focused on music or film right now?
IC: I go back and forth. I love music, and I love films. That's what I do; my career is carved up between music and movies.
AC: You wrote the screenplay for movies like Friday and Barbershop. Can you talk about the difference between writing songs for an album and writing a screenplay?
IC: Writing a song, especially rap, you can pretty much do freestyle; there are no rules, no boundaries. You have to rhyme, but there's no template. You can go where you want to go. With a movie, you really have to lay it out, and it has to all connect. You have to have your major story and plotlines and subplotlines. It's a more thought-out process. It's more tedious, but having a movie come out is way more satisfying than a record, because it's so much harder to make.Sunday, March 16, 2008
Big MacChicken SuperSandwich....Goodbye World...
This was rough.
I feel the need to give everyone a little backround before I start flashing some truly amazing photos.
Last October I was brainstorming the General Tso’s Philly Cheesesteak when Cee-Pee came to me with this, “One of the greatest things my friend ever came up with was a double big mac with McChicken patties as the bread. It has yet to be achieved but its defo on the list.”
We have been going back and forth about this burger for quite a while and I’ve claimed multiple times that “I’ll make it tomorrow during my lunch break”. The next day would come around and I’d either left my camera at home or completely forgotten about it.
Today was the exception. Cee-Pee and I spoke yesterday when I vowed to create this Atkins-friendly masterpiece. Consider it achieved, except for the double part.
Behold the Big MacChicken:
The whole time I was assembling the burger I kept reminding myself of the calories and fat content but it had to be done, for science of course. After ordering 3 McChickens and a Big Mac I found a quiet corner of the restaurant and sat down and began dissecting the sandwiches. The McChickens came apart easily and I stacked the buns to the side. I kept some of the mayo on the patties as I knew that some sauce would be lost on the bun of the Big Mac. Each bun was removed and immediately replaced with a chicken patty while trying to keep as much of the secret sauce, lettuce, onion and pickle intact on the burger patty. The sandwich ended up being much taller than the Big Mac and was heavy for it’s size. After looking around the restaurant to see if anyone was watching I dove in.
With the first bite I found myself going through a crunchy/juicy layer after layer and the texture was to die for. Everything just worked. Clouds split as a bright ray of sunshine beamed down to my table. The elderly couple a few tables over started playing a harp as a unicorn walked by during my second bite. I was in heaven for a few seconds then the guilt hit me. Was I really doing this? 4 sandwiches at once? I had to stop. There was no way I could finish this monster.
Fast forward 35 minutes and I’m presently at my work desk and miserable. Thoughts of running to the restroom to vomit are racing through my head. I have a conference call in 20 minutes and I don’t know if I can make it. Fuck. Is it really my stomach that is aching or am I psychologically telling myself to vomit. All I know is that my mind is telling me that the sandwich was absolutely delicious but my body is rejecting it.
Friday, March 14, 2008
Two original Krispy Kreme doughnuts, 4 slices of bacon and two 1/4 lb. beef patties round out this very sweet Luther Burger.
I’ll save the history of this burger for the thousand other websites that have done it before and restrict this page to our review.
To keep the project less than gourmet, we simply seasoned the ground beef with kosher salt and fresh cracked black pepper. No eggs, onions, green peppers, bread crumbs, or other bullshit. We used store-brand american cheese slices, the bacon was pre-cooked and I bought the doughnuts from the Krispy Kreme case in the supermarket.
The burger patties went on and off the grill uneventfully. I sliced the donuts in half and placed them on the grill, cut side down, alongside the bacon while the cheese was attempting to melt on the patties. Once the doughnut buns showed nice grill marks they were removed carefully with the bacon and we assembled the burgers.
After the first bite I decided that 2 patties was just too much meat and it was overpowering, but then again I’m probably just being a big pussy about it. After removing one of the patties we proceeded with the second and third bites. The glaze was really tasty and worked well with the bacon but the caramelness of the doughnuts took over. Balance is so key when assembling a burger and for some reason we just couldn’t get it right. Maybe a sauce to compliment the sweetness was needed. Dijon mustard perhaps? We fuck with a dijon and brown sugar glaze on salmon and the combo works really well.
Overall homeboy was so sweet (think “hamburger McGriddle“) that we thought the Krispy Kreme doughnuts would be better suited on a breakfast sandwich with an egg and bacon, sausage or ham rather than a hamburger. Look forward to seeing a Krispy Kreme breakfast sandwich up here soon.
http://groceryeats.com/Sunday, March 09, 2008
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Sunday, March 02, 2008
Simmons Endorses Obama
Russell Simmons has just announced his endorsement of Senator Barack Obama, but the hip-hop mogul did not always have kind words for the candidate.
“Obama’s leadership, passion and demand for a change resonates effectively with the aspirations of millions of people who want a better quality of life,” Mr. Simmons, co-founder of Def Jam Recordings, said in a statement.
But last year, Mr. Simmons criticized Mr. Obama, Democrat of Illinois, over the latter’s comments comparing Don Imus’s racially disparaging remark about the Rutgers University women’s basketball team to rappers’ lyrics.
“My response to Senator Obama is that you have to talk about the poverty and ignorance that creates such a climate that the poets can talk like that,” Mr. Simmons told ABC News in April. “And all the politicians owe them an education and an opportunity for a better life – and maybe they’ll say something better.”
Representing a different generation of Democratic support, Hugh L. Carey, a former governor of New York, is backing Mr. Obama, The Times reported today.
Kotakus Drew Crecente....
I'll start with the admission that I am one of the early a-duh-pters that has the HD DVD add-on for the XBOX 360. That doesn't make me a MS fanboi, I would instead describe myself as an evil-company-hateboi. And if you want proof that I'm not in MS' camp just talk to me someday about Vista and its wonderful support of earlier versions of Office.
There are several reasons that the death of HD DVD sticks in my craw.
1) HD DVD was far more consumer-friendly.
* It's region-free. The spec does not have Region coding, allowing for my purchase of titles from anywhere in the world. I could watch German scheisse videos featuring Cartman's mom to my heart's content.
* It's easily upgradeable. An ethernet port is mandatory in the HD DVD spec. The majority of stand alone Blu-ray players don't have ethernet which not only limits interactive features but more importantly complicates upgrade issues. Something the early adopters will be realizing once Profile 2.0 (BD-Live) is widely released.
* AACS (onerous copy protection) is optional in HD DVD but required in Blu-ray. This should come as no surprise to anybody familiar with Sony and their bootkit rootkit bonanza rewards.
Although none of these features may matter to you, the underlying principle of being consumer-friendly should. Sony simply doesn't get it and frankly I feel that they don't care.
2) Who the hell decided "one format to rule them all?"
Yeah. I actually have heard of Betamax but I've also heard of Macintosh, Firefox and Linux. Simply put - choice is good for consumers. I recognize that there are additional costs to the studios in authoring more than one format but in the scheme of things this is a negligible cost.
The excuse that consumers wouldn't get off of the fence until the "format war" was over is a self-fulfilling prophecy. I can guaran-damn-tee you that the fence is where I'll stay firmly entrenched next time around.
3) My last beef is far less tangible but still valid to me and that is this bully-ish concept of Sony declaring that if we didn't like their rules then they were going to take their ball (read: movie studio) and go home.
I recognize that I'm painting Sony with a very broad brush (as I type this on my snazzy Sony VAIO laptop sitting in front of my gorgeous Sony XBR2-60" TV) and that's not my intent. But faulting "Sony" is less cumbersome an attribution than to the conference room full of pointy-headed-asshats who were behind this consumer unfriendly move.
So while my 360 will rely heavily on downloaded movies and videos from XBL the HD DVD will still live on in my house in the 40-ish movies that I currently have and the (hopefully) $10 movies to come in the following months.
HD DVD, I hardly knew ya.By Jeffrey Jolson
HOLLYWOOD, CA (Hollywood Today) 3/2/08 — Oscar 2008 Best Actress Marion Cotillard, set to co-star with Johnny Depp in a film shooting in Chicago next week, is making headlines not with that movie “Public Enemies,” but by becoming one in America with her comments that the United States fabricated the 9/11 attacks for financial and political reasons.
“This could be a powder keg issue for thousands of firefighters and the families of victims who may picket her next film with my full support,” said 9/11 first responder/fireman Mike Lennon who later made a documentary on the events surrounding the horrific disaster. “Having human remains in my hands on a dozen occasions makes her ignorant statements despicable.”
Cottilard, who won the Academy Award for Best Actress last Sunday for playing singer Edith Piaf in “Le Vie en Rose”is in the news for comments she made a year ago to French TV that have surfaced with a vengeance. She contends the U.S. destroyed the World Trade Center buildings and killed its 5,000 occupants because the towers needed costly rebuilding.
Speaking to French TV, she questions if everything about 9/11 was a fake. “It was a money-sucker because they were finished, it seems to me, by 1973, and to re-cable all that, to bring up-to-date all the technology and everything, it was a lot more expensive, that work, than destroying them.”
It gets more bizarre: “I think we’re lied to about a number of things,” said the 32-year-old actress. “We see other towers of the same kind being hit by planes. Are they burned? They [sic] was a tower, I believe it was in Spain, which burnt for 24 hours. It never collapsed. None of these towers collapsed. And there [in New York], in a few minutes, the whole thing collapsed.”
She is set to play Depp’s girlfriend in the major US studio shoot starting next Monday, which brings up the question of should Universal Pictures stick with a contracted co-star that may draw picketing by 9/11 victim’s families to its premiere and showings everywhere?
That is suddenly a very real prospect, and not one Uni is likely to bet $100 million dollar-plus on. Depp, who gets $20 million per film, plays 30s gangster John Dillinger in “Public Enemies,” and Cotillard is scheduled to play his belle Billie Frechette.
“She has a fundamental right to come over here and film a movie, but for her to say 9/11 was a government conspiracy, you have to ask, why does she want to come here and shoot a movie?” said Lennon, who made a firefighter perspective doc called “Brothers on Holy Ground.” There will be backlash and she will suffer the consequences of what she said.”
Apparently feeling she had not sufficiently torpedoed her budding career as a Hollywood leading lady, she went on to explain in the interview that the moon landings in 1969 were another US hoax. She said: “Did a man really walk on the Moon? I saw plenty of documentaries on it, and I really wondered. And in any case I don’t believe all they tell me, that’s for sure.”
Expect her to do some emergency back-pedaling this week. Cotillard, who is very popular in France and born and raised in Paris, made the comments on TV show Paris Première - Paris Dernière, in a program broadcast a year ago.