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Beck/Smith Hollywood's 2009 Tacky Taste Awards
Happy Thanksgiving to one and all, and a big thank you to readers of this column who submitted candidates for this year's Tacky Taste Awards. From lofty heights to lowlifes, cheesy reality TV stars to the Nobel Prize Committee — 2009 marks …Read more.
Jesse Ventura: Governor to Mexico to 'Conspiracy Theory'/Louis van Amstel Chokes Up with Emotion Over Kelly' Osbourne's Journey
Former wrestler and Governor of Minnesota Jesse Ventura tells us politics has been the last thing on his mind in the past few years. He and his wife have been enjoying living the simple life in Mexico. "I haven't been doing anything in politics …Read more.
ASK STACY
DEAR STACY: I'm curious about Mike Rowe of "Dirty Jobs." Is he married? How did he get his job? A little background, please. — Hannah A., Cedar Rapids, Iowa
DEAR HANNAH: The single, 47-year-old Rowe hails from Baltimore and now is …Read more.
Ray Romano Talks about What Drives Him/Mark Indelicato Keeping the Faith Despite 'Ugly Betty' Move
Production has just wrapped on the first 10 episodes of Ray Romano's new TNT "Men of a Certain Age" series. Now he waits anxiously for the Dec. 7 unveiling of his new baby to see whether audiences accept him in a dramedy far different from …Read more.
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Hamilton Counting Down Days Till Hard-Sought Comeback/It's Tacky Taste Voting Time AgainSkating great Scott Hamilton is anxiously counting down the days till Nov. 7 — when he'll perform on ice for the first time in five years and eight months. "I'll never feel like I'm ready," he says. "The last time I came back, from cancer, I was 12 years younger. From diagnosis through chemo and back was 6-and-a-half months. Those muscles, as much as they'd been shocked and were atrophied for a few months, I still had something to work with. This time, all those muscles were gone. I had nothing," recounts the 51-year-old Olympic Gold medalist, who retired after being treated for a benign brain tumor in 2004, and who has been in hormone replacement therapy for years. "For the past 11-and-a-half months, I've been slowly, methodically building up my strength and endurance again, trying not to get hurt in the process. I'm respecting nature." Hamilton's reappearance on ice is for his "An Evening With Scott Hamilton & Friends" gala benefiting the Cleveland Clinic, where he has received care. Following that, he'll perform in the "Kaleidoscope" ice spectacular in Washington, D.C., with fellow cancer survivor Dorothy Hamill and an all-star lineup. Promoting cancer survivorship and women's health, "Kaleidoscope" will be shown Thanksgiving (11/26) on Fox — Scott's first skating performance on TV since his farewell. Why go through the grueling regimen he says has put him in pain every day? "There are many layers to this," he says. "One is, I really felt myself physically failing. My health was falling apart. I could literally touch my two middle fingers and thumb and make an 'O' around my thigh, but I couldn't see my feet because my belly had gotten so big. I tried to get back in the gym. That really helped, but it doesn't give me the same benefit as skating does. It's not the same high level of activity. I needed a goal, a reason to show up every day. Not three times a week in the gym — every day. Skating has always been the way I've gotten my health back in the past," notes the athlete, who overcame a long childhood illness through skating. "It's the only thing that's done it for me." He knew he'd need a deadline, he says, so he committed to the performance in Cleveland and announced his intention on Oprah Winfrey's show. Now he feels he's at an "OK" place to perform, but envisions improving and doing even more next year. As for wife Tracie, "She's been 100 percent supportive, but she's also been kind of trying to talk me into being more conservative with my approach. She's afraid I'm going to get hurt, badly," admits Hamilton. "But if you set the bar low, that's as far as you'll go." CHANGE OF PACE: It'll be a very different Jason Earles on Wednesday's (11/4) installment of the Disney XD series "Aaron Stone" than the actor's "Hannah Montana" fans are used to seeing. Earles will be seen back in action as Jackson in a new episode of "Hannah Montana" Nov. 8. TOTALLY TACKY: It's that time of year again, when we ask readers to select the entertainment celebrities most deserving of our annual Beck/Smith Tacky Taste Awards. This year, we're in a virtual tsunami of tackiness, so we're especially glad that it's you who'll determine the tackiest of 2009, not us. This is, after all, a year when gossip magazine covers and reality shows have been crowded with the likes of Jon and Kate Gosselin, and dethroned Miss California Carrie Prejean. Besides asking Prejean the fateful question about her views on same-sex marriage, gossipmonger Perez Hilton's remembered this year for such tacky antics as publicly jumping to the conclusion that Michael Jackson's cardiac arrest was a hoax. Then there are the actual stars who've drawn complaints for tacky behavior, like Christian Bale for his "Terminator" on-set tirade against a crew member, Mel Gibson for the breakup of his 28-year-marriage and subsequent unveiling of his new relationship with pregnant fiancee Oksana Grigorieva, and Larry David for splashing urine on a portrait of Christ as part of a joke on "Curb Your Enthusiasm." And there are many more, of course. Tell us who's your choice for tackiest and why — by going to Tacky Taste at www.becksmithhollywood.com, or writing us in care of Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., St. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045. The winners, if you can call them that, will be announced Thanksgiving week. THE INDUSTRY EYE: Director Renny Harlin and Val Kilmer, whose careers have each seen better days, will be off to the former Soviet Union shortly to make "Georgia," with "Entourage's" Emmanuelle Chriqui and hot Brit talents Rupert Friend and Richard Coyle. It'll be interesting to see whether Harlin and Kilmer can make something special of their tale of a war reporter who goes to cover the Georgia-Russia conflict and its atrocities after nearly being killed in Iraq — and finds one of his big problems is disinterest back home. With reports by Emily-Fortune Feimster To find out more about Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith and read their past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2009 MARILYN BECK AND STACY JENEL SMITH DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM
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