Rhythm and Alps festival final lineup announced


The final lineup of the second Rhythm and Alps in Cardrona has been announced, with Chet Faker, Zane Lowe and London Elektricity joining headliners Bastille.

Once again the headlining acts will perform in Cardrona on December 30 before heading to Gisborne.

Festival organisers have promised more resources and staff on deck to handle the 10,000-strong crowd expected for the festival.

Tickets went on sale last month but it was expected there would be a spike in sales from today with the announcement.

Festival head of marketing Julie Warmington said there were no plans to exceed the 10,000 tickets that were available. “We do expect to sell out again this year,” she said.

Organisers had not expected the event would be as popular as it was in its first year in Cardrona after it was moved from Methven.

Complaints were raised about the lengthy check-in times, wait periods for buying drinks and not enough buses heading from the event back to Wanaka, causing long delays.

Warmington said there would be faster entry, fewer queues, more staff and buses, as well as a larger camping area.

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– The Southland Times

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Dream comes true for author


As if working part time and raising two children wasn’t enough, Invercargill’s Abby Wilder has self-published her debut novel.

The 34-year-old, whose novel Girl Behind Glass was published at the end of June, said she had become a huge advocate for self-publishing.

And she’s not alone.

New Zealand Society of Authors president Kyle Mewburn said self-publishing e-books had taken off with a “big boom” in New Zealand.

As established publishers reduced their lists, it made it harder for people to become a published author, he said.

“[Self-publishing has] always been recognised. It’s becoming more of a part of the environment now. People turn to self-publishing when they realise that being published is becoming harder,” Mewburn said.

Self-publishing allows an author to adopt the role of both publisher and distributor, taking complete responsibility for the publication of their work.

“I’m an advocate of anything that helps a writer get out there. Writers need every option available to publish their work,” he said.

Leading such a busy lifestyle, Wilder said she had never found the time to pursue her dream of publishing a book until she was introduced to self-publishing at the Invercargill writers group Southern Scribes

“I just love the fact that you have control over all aspects of your book,” Wilder said.

Wilder described her book as a young-adult dystopian novel set in the future. The book tackles both environmental issues and the personal issues of her characters, she said.

“I never even really considered [approaching a publisher]. One of the reasons is because I wanted to test the waters a little bit first and then it was through talking to another local independently published author that really encouraged me to give it a go,” she said.

“After heaps of starts and stops, throwing out stories and starting again, I finally got a full length novel . . . it was my writers group in particular that encouraged me to self-publish it.”

Girl Behind Glass is available as an e-book through the Amazon Kindle.

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– The Southland Times

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Watch: Robert Plant’s Rainbow


Watch the video to the first single, Rainbow, of Robert Plants new album.

Robert Plant’s new album, Lullaby And…The Ceaseless Roar will be released 5 September.

The album features 11 new recordings, nine of which are original songs written by Plant with his band, The Sensational Space Shifters.

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Lily Allen banned from Game of Thrones


Lily Allen has been banned from talking about Game Of Thrones.

Speaking on Sydney radio station Nova 969 Allen was asked whether she had auditioned for Game Of Thrones.

In May Allen told a Reddit chat she had been approached for a role in Game Of Thrones but had turned it down because it involved kissing her brother Alfie, who plays Theon Greyjoy.

Alfie Allen later revealed that his sister had been fibbing.

“The only thing I’m going to say on this is that’s not true,” he told Vulture magazine

Now it seems Alfie has banned his sister from ever talking about the hit HBO series.

“You know what I am not going to talk about it,” Lily Allen told Nova.

“I am not even allowed to mention the letters of what the show starts with. Alfie put me under strict orders.”

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– AAP

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Classic movies actually offensive in 2014


We’ve all experienced it, that dizzying moment when you look back on a classic movie from your childhood and dare to ask your adult brain, “Hang on, what was that!”

Like when Princess Leia kissed Luke in The Empire Strikes Back. Yeah, they turned out to be BROTHER AND SISTER! Is what you scream into your nearest full-length mirror one morning shortly after watching Return of the Jedi, or, if you’re slow with plotlines, some time in your teens.

Here now are four more examples of such sheer creepiness from some of your best-loved movies, you may scream at the nearest mirror again, ‘What were they

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Zach Braff is still a wandering soul


Blame Zach Braff. The Shins are warbling at Cucina inside the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills, a power lunch spot frequented by Hollywood’s most cold-blooded players. Over the restaurant’s speakers, The Simple Song – the same one used in the trailer for Braff’s new film Wish I Was Here – interrupts a bite of his steak salad.

“You’re going to put that in the story, right Here we are . . . in a nook in the Four Seasons . . . and the Shins come on,” the 39-year-old Scrubs-star-turned-auteur wisecracks in a mock narrator’s voice.

Praise Zach Braff. By making the Shins the “change-your-life” contretemps of Garden State (and its Grammy-winning soundtrack), the New Jersey native introduced the mid-’00s indie pop avatars to the masses, allowing them to anesthetise lunches in swanky hotel restaurants. A decade later, actor and band are as intertwined as John Travolta and the Bee Gees.

“Everyone’s seen an amazing band and thought, ‘How does no one know about them” Braff speaks animatedly, powder-blue eyes bulging. “I love being able to occasionally pull out bands and say, ‘Check these [guys] out.’ ”

To his acolytes, Braff is the every-nebbish – the alienated but empathetic “nice guy” struggling in a world that has rewarded his talent generously, but not absolutely. He’s the patron saint of those slightly thwarted in their ambitions, lucky to be where they’re at and unable to escape the neurotic black hole of their heads.

Yet others see him as an emblem of musical gentrification, a privileged incarnate of “Stuff White People Like,” a glib tipping point in the eventual Urban Outfitterisation of indie rock.

Regardless of your axis on the Braffian spectrum, Garden State’s impact was unmistakable. Made for US$2.5 million, the 2004 word-of-LiveJournal sensation grossed US$26.7 domestically, sold enough DVDs to fill the infinite abyss, and won a Grammy (Best Compilation Soundtrack) and Independent Spirit Award (Best First Feature).

The success shocked Braff. It transformed him from a pratfalling TV doctor to an indie heartthrob – a writer, director, actor and introduced co-star Natalie Portman as the Manic Pixie Dream Girl. The film’s screwball psychosomatic wanderings set to sad-sack indie rock gave Little Miss Sunshine and Juno a style to run with. It happened before he was 30. Brafflash was inevitable.

“He’s not afraid of being emotionally accessible, tackling big issues, or being too cool for school,” explains Stacey Sher, an executive producer on Garden State and a producer of Wish I Was Here, opening in New Zealand in September. The new film chronicles the travails of Aidan Bloom (Braff), an out-of-work actor struggling to cope with the death of his father and the rigors of parenthood and marriage.

“He’s completely authentic in what he wants to express,” Sher says. “It’s easy for cynics to take potshots at someone who wears their heart on their sleeves. But that’s what endears him to his fans.”

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Today the heart-on-sleeve metaphor is rendered literal by a pin affixed to Braff’s olive denim work shirt – it reads, simply, “Love.” The pin was a present from a friend who offered it as a reminder for when he’s feeling “down, stressed and overwhelmed.” It’s the Braff binary writ small: you either identify with someone pushing 40 striving to stay loving in spite of existential woes, acknowledged flaws and petty irritations. Or you find a “Love” pin irredeemably corny.

“I didn’t know that Garden State would be this astronomical hit,” Braff says, his voice rising in agitation. He notes that “90 per cent” of his most vitriolic attackers describe themselves online as writers.

“Was some of it didactic Sure. Was some of it quirk for quirk sake Sure,” he continues. “But to go back and diss it, and say we were so young and naive, that’s insulting and silly. It was pretty good for a first effort.”

Some celebrities insulate themselves from criticism by staying offline, but Braff actively engages his 1.4 million Twitter followers. He lauds its ability to joke with fans in Australia when fighting bouts of insomnia. But his Twitter bio tellingly reads: “I block people quicker than I should.”

“He goes out of his way to be nice to fans and reward them for liking him,” says Donald Faison, his Scrubs and Wish I Was Here co-star. “He was in London doing a play [2012’s Braff-penned “All New People”] and some German fans wrote to him; he was so touched, he ended up travelling to Germany to visit them.”

A Braffian takeover seemed imminent after Garden State. You don’t need to know about out-of-state production tax credits to understand that when your first movie makes its money back 20-fold, someone usually quickly finances a follow-up. But that didn’t happen. Listening to Braff explain his decade-long odyssey to make its successor doubles as an indictment of modern film financing.

“My ego was humbled,” Braff says. “I know I haven’t been able to make a movie in 10 years, but I’ve tried. They just all fell apart. Of course, I could’ve gone and made a big studio romantic comedy with stars. But Scrubs put me in a position where I could say no. I didn’t want to put my name on [crap].”

That’s not to say that there were no industry dalliances. The 2006 DreamWorks release, The Last Kiss was a romantic comedy misfire that promised him the chance to rewrite the script in a more “gritty and real” tone. (“Yeah, right,” he rolls his eyes.) That year saw the release of The Ex,another critical and commercial failure.

High points included a 2005 Emmy nomination for Outstanding Lead Actor on Scrubs (he left the show in 2009), and a hilarious turn as a Girls Gone Wild sleazoid on Arrested Development. His dream deferred was the adaptation of a dark Danish film called Open Hearts. Sean Penn reportedly agreed to star, but production stalled when Braff’s lead actress (whose identity he declines to divulge) bailed for another role while he was location scouting in Atlanta.

“Everything is celebrity dependent, and celebrities’ schedules are always in flux. It’s fascinating that anything gets made,” Braff says. “Eighty percent of a movie is the cast, but money guys treat it like a Chinese food menu. ‘You can only make it with him if you pair him with her.’ There’s people on lists whose names you don’t even know and when you ask, they say, ‘Oh, they’re in a giant franchise coming out. By the time your movie comes out, they’ll be huge.’ ”

Frustration mounting, Braff co-authored a spec script with his older brother, Adam. When financiers baulked at giving him final cut (the power to control the version of the film released into theaters) he turned to Kickstarter, the crowd-funding website that had recently helped finance the Veronica Mars movie.

“I’m making a tiny movie about my spirituality, my family and my biggest fears. And I’m supposed to give final cut to a banker, who’s going to make his cuts totally based on a test screening in the suburbs of L.A. No. [Forget] that,” Braff thunders in a mild-mannered way.

“Everything everyone loves about Garden State wouldn’t be in Garden State if I hadn’t stumbled into a rich guy who knew nothing about the business and gave me final cut,” he says.

Without a similar life raft, Braff filmed a wry video pitch seeking $2 million to help offset previously procured funding and Braff’s financial investment. Within about a month, 46,500 people had contributed a total of $3.1 million.

The gambit elicited a firestorm of Internet criticism, with the tactic being branded as a publicity stunt or vanity project. People carped that Braff’s project detracted from other prospective Kickstarters. They groused that an actor who once made $350,000 per episode on Scrubs shouldn’t scrounge for loose change on the Web. One Flavorwire headline bluntly read: “Why Zach Braff’s Wish I Was Here is Becoming a PR Nightmare.”

“I drove more traffic to Kickstarter than they’d ever had in a single day,” Braff retorts. “And these people stayed and invested in other projects. I put in the biggest risk of anyone. If I didn’t sell this at Sundance, all the fulfillment costs fell on me. There’s a scenario in which we don’t get into Sundance or no one buys it, and I still have to ship T-shirts and host screenings all over the globe.”

In person, Braff retains the screaming-in-the-rain sincerity of his cinematic alter egos. His blue eyes narrow and turn silvery at the mention of haters. The passion is unmistakable. At one point, while comparing camera crane movements on Wish I Was Here and Garden State, he pounds his fist loudly onto the table. He describes himself as a loner, now more than ever after the recent dissolution of his five-year relationship with model Taylor Bagley.

The ennui of his films is replicated at lunch. He can go from amiable to aloof between sips of Diet Coke. He’s candid about the themes coursing through Wish I Was Here. The title comes from his struggles to stay present and engaged. A spiritual sequel to Garden State, it raises personal and religious questions: how to reconcile personal limitations with childhood dreams, the fantasy of being saved by the love of your family, the crushing nothingness of death.

“If I have a religion, it’s just aspiring to be a good person and to live to the fullest in every moment, because I don’t think there’s an afterlife. I think we’re animals and they put us in the ground, and we’re eaten by worms,” Braff says.

As he says this, his face tightens and his eyes zone out in the familiar 1000-yard stare of his on-screen characters. Fame has made him wary, but he refuses to entirely close off. He seems uninterested in making others believe in him. He’s more concerned with doing things that allow him to continue to believe in himself.

“I can talk all day about living in the moment, but you’ve got to practice it and catch yourself. It doesn’t mean you don’t have be on your phone or that you’re not going to do dumb [things]. We all do,” Braff continues. “It doesn’t work for me to believe that Noah’s Ark was real. The only religious sentiment that does is to go, ‘I’m here now. How can I be a good person to those around me How can I express myself artistically, honestly and truly, without compromise’ ”

-The Washington Post

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Singer Rihanna’s golden World Cup hand ball


Fifa appear to be relaxing their rules around the World Cup after pop diva Rihanna and German WAGS (wives and girlfriends) were photographed holding the famous trophy at a victory party in Brazil.

In the past Fifa guidelines have strictly stipulated that only winners of the tournament and heads of state were allowed to handle the official trophy. But that went out the window last night.

Barbados-born Rihanna threw her support behind Germany to such an extent that she lifted her German jersey to reveal a black bra at the Maracana as fulltime sounded on their 1-nil extra time win over Argentina.

Earlier she had taken a ”selfie” alongside Brazil legend Pele.

She attended the aftermatch celebrations that went long into the night.

Rihanna tweeted photos of herself and several German players with the golden trophy, writing: “I touched the cup, held the cup, kissed the cup, took a selfie with the cup!!! I meeeaan….. what is YO bucket list looking like bruh”

I touched the cup, held the cup, kissed the cup, took a selfie wit the cup!!! I meeeaan…… what is YO bucket list looking like bruh

— Rihanna (@rihanna) July 14, 2014

Wives, girlfriends and children of the Germany players were also pictured with the trophy during the celebrations in Rio.

Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel and president Joachim Gauck were also present at the post-game party.

The win was Germany’s fourth World Cup victory and the team would be presented with a gold-plated replica of the trophy to keep.

Sponsor Adidas have been quick to react to the win, getting new replica jerseys onto the market, adding a fourth star above the German emblem to represent their latest success.

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– Stuff

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Doctor Who first full episode leaked


He’s battled aliens, monsters, robots and (most memorably) the scariest statues ever carved, but it appears Doctor Who has met his match with a very 21st century foe – hackers.

The BBC has been hit by yet another problem for the upcoming series of

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Sacha Baron Cohen film outrages UK town


Residents of the English town of Grimsby have been outraged that their home has been portrayed by Sacha Baron Cohen as a rubbish-strewn, violent ghetto in which drunks urinate from windows and mothers hand children cans of beer in the street.

Stills from Baron Cohen’s latest movie – called

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Bill Bailey ‘in limbo’ for NZ tour


Bill Bailey admits he has got to a point in his life when he’s stopping and assessing things, just in time for his upcoming tour Down Under.

The popular English comedian has announced he will take his new show, Limboland, around New Zealand this November when he aims to explore the gap between how we imagine our lives and how we really are.

It all sounds rather soul-searching and spiritual. But Bailey, like a true Englishman, is far more comfortable comparing it to a cup of tea.

“I think that it struck me as quite an interesting area to explore. You can look at it from different levels: almost like preparing a cup of tea,” he says.

“You could have really high hopes for this cup of tea. But if it didn’t pan out, if it’s too hot and I burn my mouth, I have to chuck it out and start again.”

It seems befitting that Bailey might want to stop and consider how he got here, considering his own life-path has had such an interesting trajectory.

It’s taken him from success as a stand-up comedian to roles on popular TV shows Black Books and Never Mind The Buzzcocks. And then on to make wildlife documentaries, such as Bill Bailey’s Jungle Hero – a two part documentary about naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace, a contemporary of Darwin.

“I found myself in the Borneo Jungle and in the Amazon looking at moths with a moth expert,” he says, sounding amazed by his own random life journey.

“There’s something profound or life-changing when you start thinking about the dreams you had as a child and what kind of job you’d end up doing, and how life takes different paths to get you to where you are now,” he says.

The comedian says he plans to explore ideas about whether or not there are external forces at play pushing us to certain points in our lives, or whether it’s all just part of a plan we had the whole time which has subconsciously played out.

He mentions one story he uses to illustrate his point on stage about how one word can change the course of your life.

“When I was a young man and a girl invited me to her house, one word was said and I realised she wasn’t the right person for me,” he says.

While Bailey is keeping the word a secret to be revealed on his show, he says audiences in the UK have reacted emotionally to this story and stories like them.

“There was this collective exhaling from the audience of people thinking ‘maybe our lives are these random things or maybe we find the people who are supposed to be with us’,” he says.

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He admits this emotional connection with his audience is something he now seeks out

“There was an emotional subtext to it, that’s something I would seek out,” he says.

“I can do funny. I’m at peace with myself with that. I can tell myself ‘that’s fine, Bill, you don’t have to keep proving yourself you big bearded fool’,” he says.

Audiences around the world would be forced to agree with him. Yes, Bailey can do funny and he intends to do it with his new show when he tours Down Under.

Bill Bailey: Limboland

Wellington: Nov 1, Michael Fowler Centre

Christchurch: Nov 3, CBS Arena

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