Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Run for the Hills

I attended the Simply Stylist event during L.A. Fashion Week, which was great to check out talented lesser-known designers. The stylist for Ginnifer Goodwin picked up a dress by Ashi Studio for the Golden Globes, and another some amazing pieces by kao pao shu for an editorial shoot with Juliette Lewis in S Magazine.

Audrina Partidge went with a slinky and sparkly chiffon dress by Iraqi designer Oday Shakar,
which she later wore that night as a presenter to the Latin VMAs.

Love the back, but not when I can see someone's backbone poking out of it! Girl should probably eat more Whoppers.




Reality TV is Not TV

You know, reality TV producers won't let just anybody come in and produce a show if you haven't before. At least that's what 3 Ball Production's J.D. Roth said during a panel I attended
at the WestDoc conference in Santa Monica last month. They prefer if you let the production company take credit for the first show, and then you can helm the next. That is, if everything works out.

Unless you're like DJ AM, AKA Adam Goldstein, associated with the likes of Nicole Richie and Mandy Moore. Then you're much more likely to come in with an idea for a reality show and get it produced by MTV. That's why, for example, celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe is credited as a producer on "The Rachel Zoe Project". She is probably not standing by, oblivious, as camera crews fly past her looking for an optimal shot.

A recent article in The New York Times questioned whether MTV network execs have any responsibility for DJ AM's exposure to drug addicts, as he was once one himself. "Gone Too Far" (an ironic title), was a show about DJ AM helping drug addicts get past their addictions.
However, the celebrity DJ was medically advised prior against too much exposure to a lifestyle he once held.

If the show was DJ AM's idea, and he was the host of the show, isn't concern for his welfare enough to put a pause in barelling ahead with production? Or, at the very least, bring some intelligence in producing on board. There are some that will say, he's an adult, he can make his own decisions. However, it does not seem entirely logical to produce a show about a recovering ex-junkie hanging out with drug addicts. Buehler?

Lemme put it in the way of a modern-day parable I just made up: Your Trappings and the Bear

Your best friend borrows your car and wrecks it. Do you let her drive your car again, without knowing for sure she's improved her driving skills? Or do you give her the benefit of the doubt and assume she's done so already? Let's also assume you don't really outright ask her if she's improved her driving skills since the last time you let her borrow your car. You just assume it's cool.

That wouldn't happen, am I right? This is almost a question of morality, in my opinion. Another way of looking at it is: How stupid can you get?

Excerpt from the article:
The series certainly shows graphic drug use, with young addicts sniffing aerosol computer cleaner and smoking crack. Those connected with “Gone Too Far” say they never intended to put Mr. Goldstein in harm’s way, but some wonder if that was an unintended result.

“It crosses all of our minds, a terrible tragedy,” said Tony DiSanto, the president
of programming for MTV.

It crosses your mind? I would hope so.





















And then there's ill-fated Balloon Boy and his father, Richard Heene. Heene is an eccentric unafraid to stand up for his obsession over reality TV stardom, which is not really saying much about your personal 15 minutes of fame. Andy Warhol would be horrified.

Heene and his family appeared before on the reality show "Wife Swap". After his brief encounter with fame, Heene wanted to produce his own show enough to hide his son in the attic and pretend he'd let him disappear into the clouds in a hot air balloon. This went on long enough to garner national news media attention, which will conclude in the end to a lot of therapy in the works for a little boy that a few dozen reality TV interviews can't cure. The poor kid's already puked twice on network television.


Rounding it out is the new star of "The Hills", Kristin Cavallari, of former "Laguna Beach" fame.
"The Hills" is down by a million viewers this season after a something like, five-year run.

Probably because, well, Kristin Cavallari
wants to be an actress, and that doesn't translate well to reality.

Reality TV just works better when its stars don't have motives. Except, of course, those the producers brand them with as the real thing.

You Say Tomato

FOX's journalistic cred is definitely up for debate, if the Obama administration vocalizes concern that the broadcast newser is pushing a political agenda, rather than the news. Or if Elisabeth Hasselbeck on The View is demanding Obama step off Republicanism.

Rachel Maddow, host of The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, points out FOX recently produced a "promo" pushing Americans to organize their own Tax Party Protests. Maddow goes on to question the validity of a major news network organizing protests against the government. If it looks like a duck...

Video from Fishbowl LA

An Amazing Reality

Reality TV Producer Mark Burnett has been awarded the Norman Lear Award, the first
for a reality TV producer. Burnett is responsible for such reality mainstays including "Survivor" and "The Apprentice". I feel like it's important "Survivor" is not to be confused with "Lost" at this point (as if one inevitably stemmed from the other), although it's probably just as easy to look at it the other way around.

















Remember "The Real World", another reality show that spawned countless one-offs? What about when it was actually interesting to watch? With the advent of reality casting, nowadays the series is more about which personalities have a propensity towards alcohol and volatile enough the likelihood a knockdown drag-out brawl is imminent.

Larry King interviewed Casting Director Stuart Brackell after Ryan Jenkins, a contestant on VH1's "Megan Wants a Millionare" killed his wife and committed suicide. Brackell claims Jenkins told her he wanted to be an actor on TV and was therefore right for the show. Jenkins, obviously, did not undergo any kind of screening beforehand, let alone psychiatric. A reality producer (I won't mention by name here) once commented screening processes are strenuous and the shows just don't always have the resources to get as particular about those kind of particulars as they'd like. Hmmm. To me, that sounds like: "I would check the brakes on my car on a regular basis, but I don't always have time".

Highlights montage from "The Real World" casts over the years posted below. Note by the last incarnation, the cast members look even less like themselves, and more so have the "Right Look" for TV.

Whatever that means:

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Who's on Top?


This was definitely her goal, to rival if not supersede Oprah:

Tyra Banks' $30 million last year made her prime-time TV's highest-paid woman

Shared via AddThis

Meanwhile, whatever happened to OWN?

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Fashionable Celebrity
























Designer Marc Jacobs is amongst the ranks of fashion celebs allured by the incessant yet revealing glare of a reality TV show or documentary film's lens. Jacobs recently disputed rumors of starring on the reality show Kept for Logo. Meanwhile, celebrity stylist Rachel Zoe is "expanding her brand" on The Rachel Zoe Project. Anna Wintour, EIC of Vogue, even allowed a documentary crew to follow her during the months before the publication of Vogue's biggest issue of the year, in The September Issue.

Not to mention the ever-widening breadth in a milieux of fashion amateurs vying for recognition: Project Runway, Running in Heels, The Fashion Show, The Stylista, The Fashionista Diaries... and so the list continues.

And then, of course there's Lauren Conrad on The Hills, and Whitney Port on The City, parlaying their careers as reality TV stars into fashion. Could this pursuit by non-celebs have been the proponent for actual fashion stars to take their cue? Everyone will have their 15 minutes, after all.







Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Hollywood Deadlines


New Yorker profile on blogger Nikki Finke, entertainment journalist-turned blogger of DHD, or Deadline Hollywood Daily.

Finke also posted a response to the profile, which involves the usage of expletives. Lady can dish it out, but can't take it!