BeansTalk Biz Newsletter

BeansTalk News: Daily news on fashion, beauty, film, television, books -- all media -- and anything else of relevant interest. (View the current month in its news entirety by clicking the date under Archives.)

Friday, March 09, 2007



Colorescience's Tiny, But Effective Sharpener

It's no secret that BeansTalk adores Colorescience and we were quite pleased that they have a new development. There are many eyeshadow pencils we love, but it's a pain to carry around a sharpener (which we're always losing, btw).

So here you go...

A new mighty mite of a pencil sharpener from Colorescience is no bigger than the cap of an eyebrow pencil…and that’s what makes it perfect.



Colorescience Eye Pencils and Lip Pencils: $12.50



Sharpener in the Cap: Priceless



A cap-and-sharpener all in one, this new little helper can be found at the tip of every eye and lip pencil from Colorescience, replacing their ordinary caps. When the point on your favorite Colorescience pencil gets a little dull, just twist the cap and Voila! A beautiful new point. No hunting for lost sharpeners and no “My favorite pencil is too short to sharpen” Blues. It’s easy, convenient, and always right where you need it.



Topping Colorescience Eye Pencils and Lip Pencils isn’t easy (unless you’re the specially made sharpener). Each features concentrated mineral pigment for long lasting colore, with a texture that’s soft enough to glide on but firm enough for perfect definition. Colorescience Pencils are formulated with natural mineral pigments, as well as jojoba oil, not the mineral oil found in most other cosmetic pencils. Keep the skin under your makeup looking great and feeling younger.



Colorescience is available at fine day spas, resorts, dermatologist and plastic surgeon offices and makeup artists’ studios. To find a Colorescience retailer in your area, visit www.colorescience.com or call toll-free 1.866.4COLORE (426-5673).


Guess Summer Bags

Check out the Guess website for some very cool new summer-themed pocketbooks. www.guess.com



Made For Mums

Both of BeansTalk’s busiest staffers are moms and we’re always looking for helpful websites to make our lives easier.

We’ve discovered…

ConnectingMoms is a one-stop site for mothers to find great parenting advice, resources, friendship, support, and fun! Within our community, we welcome mothers from every stage of motherhood and all walks of life in a friendly and judgement-free atmosphere that go far beyond any color, race, age, parenting style, and/or religion.

~ Personalized Profiles
~ Receive Product Giveaways!
~ Share and Upload Mom Videos!
~ Interesting and Informative Groups & Discussions
~ Share Photos & Keep a Personal Diary
~ Top Coupon deals & discounts for Our Moms!


We see it as kind of My Space plus Friendster plus Craig’s List, with maybe Coupon Seven thrown in – and all for mummies. www.connectingmoms.com


Project Runway Alum Update


Project Runway (Season Two) alum Emmett McCarthy retains Pierce Mattie Public Relations, Inc as the agency of record for his signature line of Emmett McCarthy clothing and accessories, as well as his EMc² boutique located in the Nolita neighborhood of New York City.

Emmett McCarthy was born sixth out of eight children in North Haven, Connecticut and now lives and works in New York City. Emmett studied fashion design and earned his B.F.A. at Parsons School of Design. After graduating from Parsons, Emmett moved to London and then Paris, working for designers in both cities and cultivating his taste for European style, color and silhouettes. Upon returning to New York, he began designing men's sport and dress shirts for Publix Group, Nautica and Wrangler, and was then hired as Design Director of Sportswear Collections with designer Ron Chereskin. He remained there for six years, creating fashion shows at CFDA's Seventh on Sixth in Bryant Park and overseeing the design direction of licensees and advertising promotions.

After his participation on Bravo’s Project Runway, Emmett opened his EMc² boutique showcasing his contemporary women’s apparel. For more information visit, www.EmmettMcCarthy.com

Thursday, March 08, 2007











Paul Mitchell Tea Tree Hair Care


Every now and then BeansTalk gets inspired or runs out of whatever hair-care products we’ve been given or we’re trying out.

So we go, alone, to the local beauty supply shop and peruse (we really take our time) and look for something appropriate for our dry, frizzle hair.

By chance, we see and sniff (it must smell good) Paul Mitchell’s Tea Tree Special Shampoo and Conditioner and have now used it a couple of times and it’s GREAT. Since Tea Tree has antiseptic properties it has a cool tingle, cleans well and leaves hair soft.

We’re so ultra picky, it’s a relatively big deal when we get excited about shampoo and conditioner (we love and need the set).

Here’s the 411 on Paul Mitchell’s Tea Tree Hair Care Special Shampoo and Conditioner

Wake up and experience pure refreshment with Paul Mitchell Tea Tree Care Special Shampoo. This special formula stimulates the scalp to help promote healthy hair. Special conditioning agents and Activated Moisture Blend smoothes, softens, and helps prevent moisture loss. The unique combination of tea tree oil, peppermint, and lavender creates a refreshing fragrance experience. Available in 10.1 oz and 16.9 oz

Fresh and Clean – A special combination of cleansers and Australian tea tree oil leave hair refreshingly clean, while enhancing vitality and adding luster.
Stimulates – The combination of tea tree oil and peppermint create a cooling tingle.
Invigorates – The unique combination of tea tree oil, peppermint, and lavender creates 
a refreshing fragrance experience.

Directions: Squeeze a dime size amount into your hands and work into a rich lather. Rinse.

Invigorating Conditioner 
Instant Detangling – 
A combination of fast acting conditioners smoothes the surface for easy wet and dry combing
Restores – Special conditioning agents and our Activated Moisture Blend smooth, soften and help prevent moisture loss
Invigorates – The unique combination of tea tree oil, peppermint, and lavender creates 
a refreshing fragrance experience


The Latest In Skin Care from Kinara

Kinara Skin Care Clinic and Spa and esthetician extraordinaire Olga Lorencin-Northrup, always “on the edge” and ahead of the rest, now offer the ultimate in facials, including Anti-Aging Plus, Ultra Cleanse, and Probiotic custom facials. These professional-grade additions to Kinara’s extensive spa menu of services were developed by Lorencin-Northrup to help keep you looking and feeling great all year long.



Kinara’s newest additions are the kind of facials estheticians themselves do on each other whenever possible. These facials incorporate costly, hard-to-obtain, anti-aging/regenerative ingredients and products. The very highest level of technical knowledge is required for formulation and application of these products. Kinara now offers these professional-grade facials as customized delights for you.



Anti-Aging Plus $275, 75 minutes



This is the ultimate customized treatment, with procedures varying from medical-grade microdermabrasion, to exfoliate deep into the layers of the skin, to a multi-layered, truly customized on-the-spot-for-you peel. Sound wave therapy is used to tighten facial muscles and boost circulation. This is followed by all three steps of Kinara’s famous “oxygenating trio,” aggressively fueling the respiration of your skin cells. A ground-breaking double rehydration process using “Hydrafil” serum is then massaged in, hydrating your skin inside and out. A collagen mask and customized finishing serum are then applied to nourish and plump the skin, leaving it refreshed, rehydrated and perfectly dewy.



Ultra-Cleanse $220, 55 minutes



The strongest version of Kinara’s Deep Detox facial. This facial is a super boost to cleanse away dull, dry, sluggish skin. Ever had to strip away layers and layers of old paint to get to that beautiful young wood underneath? The same idea applies here! Incorporating a customized alpha-beta peel – a powerful combo of resorcinol, salicylic, lactic, glycolic, and malic acid – to remove excess build up of dead skin cells. Next a soothing mask is applied to prime the skin and prepare it for the second, even deeper, skin renewing peel, which will boost the skin’s capability for absorbing pure oxygen into the cellular matrix. Finished with a luxurious, vitamin c-rich repairing balm, your skin will emerge radiant, velvety smooth and clean as a whistle. Perfect for discolored, acne–prone, not-so-pure complexions.





Probiotic Facial $250, 55 minutes



Utilizes the highly beneficial probiotic properties of acidophilus to soothe, clear and cleanse agitated, sensitive, acne-prone skin. Probiotics are “friendly bacteria” that have been used for centuries to treat infection and counteract toxic overflow in the body systems. Applied topically, these anti-microbial ingredients eliminate harmful bacteria and keep your skin clean, clear and beautiful, leaving it ready to stand strong against environmental as well as dietary pollutants.





Kinara consists of a day spa, café and boutique located in West Hollywood’s design district at 656 North Robertson Boulevard. A favorite of celebrities and LA’s most powerful complexions, it is a refuge open to all who seek nurturing experiences and better skin. Kinara Skincare products are exclusively distributed at the Kinara Skin Care Clinic and online at www.kinaraspa.com. To make an appointment, call 310-657-9188.

Wednesday, March 07, 2007



The Real Dirt And We Have It

We’ve now watched eight of the 10 episodes of FX’s “Dirt.” Having worked extensively in this arena, we’d like to set the record straight for viewers (although we don’t know exactly who you are yet, since no one we know outside of our work has actually seen the show).

Dirt is Courteney Cox’s slickly sleazy FX series set in the world of high-stakes, big-money tabloid magazines. Cox plays icy Lucy Spiller, the magazine’s ME. She employs her long-time (and perhaps only) friend and resident schizophrenic Don (played by the talented Brit, Ian Hart). Don’s a relentless paparazzi photographer, whose loyalty to Lucy, certainly as proven in recent episodes, is unwavering. Don’s wacky. He loves cats, imagines they talk to him, hears voices, sees alter-egos, is a wealth of detailed trivia.

Dirt is very much in the tradition of FX’s popular, if bleak, Nip/Tuck. A viewer is hard-pressed to find anyone genuinely compassionate, or even, really likeable. These are not, in any kind of normal circumstances, people you’d want to know, let alone turn your back on.

Luckily for those of us glass-half-full types, you don’t often have to run into real-life characters with the gloss of couture slime with the proverbial “tragic” pasts. But they’re prevalent in Dirt, just as they are in Nip/Tuck.

What is most curious about the series is that Cox, who has battled paparrazi and the tabloids – as has her BFF, Jennifer Aniston – for more than a decade, chose this arena. Of course, her agenda to damn them is constantly clear. Yet she also wants to create a fictional, hard-boiled universe that’s compelling enough to sell ad time. She succeeds in moments, but not often. The greatest feat is by far the casting; the acting is, for the most part, excellent. Mariette Hartley is great as her self absorbed mother, Paul Ruebens always a welcome face.

She’s recently been linked (denied, of course) to her co-star Josh Stewart, who plays down-on-his luck Holt (now there's a soap opera name, if we've ever heard one), an actor whose career Lucy revives. Stewart has a perennially sullen, pained look and looks a good deal like Sean Penn crossed with the late Glenn Quinn. He’s sinewy, but then, so is Cox (try not be distracted by the Botox), and nearly everyone else in Dirt.

Certainly the original intent is expose the nasty, pay-to-play tabloid world , but for those who have dabbled on the fringes of this universe (Bauer’s rag “In Touch” and the more revered, but ultimately tabloid-y, People Magazine), this is far from a realistic portrayal.

The Dirt offices alone – much like the Ugly Betty “Mode” magazine ones – look a good deal more like CAA than Time Inc.’s People. We use People as an example because it is the world’s biggest weekly, and considered by PR peeps to be the go-to venue to “break” stories (translated, this means they often give People the first shot at wedding/baby/engagement/rehab/coming-out stories that grace the three-decades-plus old magazine’s covers.

This week’s People cover, Patrick Dempsey and his fresh twin babies, is a perfect example --never mind that on the inside pages, his first child can barely contain her needy brattiness in the glowing photos, which promote the famously-difficult, albeit now hot, actor and his sleeping blond babes. His rep couldn’t have asked for a better press release. See? He’s so much nicer and sweeter than the nasty homophone he works with, Isaiah Washington.)

Anyway, the point is, despite the fact that the West Los Angeles’ office of People Magazine (in the same building as Time Inc’s faltering Entertainment Weekly and celebity-wedding-photo-must-appear-in In Style) is in a nice high-rise on Wilshire Blvd. , it is by no means the plasma-filled super-tech facility that Dirt is.

Paul Ruebens (yay, we love him) plays a seasoned once-legit reporter who easily tosses $20K in cash to a small-town coroner to get the first-look exclusive-to-media look at the autopsy report of a dead cheerleader (who Lucy is making into a celebrity by digging for you got it, dirt).

We’ve heard of colleagues slipping bartenders $20 tips for a glass of water to find out if the celebutante of the moment had been in the night before, but never of coin of such ridiculous proportions.

Even tabloids crashing weddings (and we’re not saying which rag, so don’t get your panties in a bunch) may hand over as much as $1,000 in cash to their most tenacious reporters to slip some green to a bell hop or server, but if they send more than one reporter on location, that’s a very big deal.

Dirt featured an episode (that same episode about dead cheerleader, who’s revealed to be pregnant with her middle-aged minister’s baby-- oh yeah, and same said minister was also “putting his love” – their quote, not ours -- into his own daughter) where Lucy sends a van (a van!) of staffers to descend upon the small town to interview anyone they can get their hands on.

To wit, People Magazine (along with the NY Daily News and the other bevy of media who hawked the story) had one reporter at a time covering the Laci Petersen case, which they milked until that teat was empty. In addition to several covers that story generated for People, two of the reporters who were involved in the coverage rotation recently penned the curiously uninteresting tale of not all, but several of the cases’ jurors. When we say recent, we do mean this year. And yes, Scott Petersen (Laci’s husband) was sentenced to death March 15, 2005, a good two years ago. Way to be topical!

So, as Time Inc. shuts down its bureaus (Time Magazine, the most illustrious of news mags, once the uber source, doesn’t even have offices in Los Angeles – the remaining L.A. staffers work from home), Dirt portrays a glistening massive, interior-design showcases filled-to-the brim with eager attentive staffers. Realistically, these reporters would work on laptops that they can drag with them to stalk, but the neat row of Dirts' flat-screened desktops is so much more impressive (at least that’s what the set designers apparently thought).

Bauer Publishing puts out Life & Style, the trashy In Touch, as well as teen mags (including J14 and Twist), the point-of-purchase women’s mags Women’s World, First for Women and a couple of weekly soap digests. That’s a rather impressive empire for the European company, founded in 1875. They are Europe’s largest privately owned publisher, publishing 120 magazines worldwide.

We use Bauer as an example because the office space hovel that houses the West Coast bureau of In Touch (Life & Style staffers work from home) makes Adam Glasser/Seymore Butts and his San Fernando Valley adult-industry offices (seen prominently in the Showtime’s “Family Business”), look positively glamorous.

At In Touch L.A., there's an office for the bureau chief (who came from American Media's Star Magazine) that is smaller than the average elementary school janitor’s closet. His door opens to an “open” space with several desks – all measuring about 300 ft. Think of a quickly put-up telemarketing facility and you have the In Touch L.A. bureau where the entire L.A. staff of about four people make phone calls from the dingy office complex on Ocean Park Blvd. in Santa Monica. There isn’t a single TV (or wasn’t a couple of years ago), let alone enough plasma screens to mime Circuit City, a la Dirt.

Are we being tetchy? The point is, there is an entirely fantasy universe portrayed in Dirt, one in which pseudo celebs come to the offices of the mag’s ME and “pitch” salacious stories about themselves for the mag to manipulate and run. Reality stars Adrienne Curry and Christopher Knight portray themselves, pitching a story to Lucy in her office, in which former wrestler Chyna (a real-life pal) joins their love nest.

The only experience we ever had with the celeb coming to the office was when then-Buffy co-star Juliet Landau came to Time Inc/People and tried to prove via an obviously doctored drivers license that she was some several years younger than she actually was. To explain, Landau happens to be the daughter of actors, Barbara Bain and Oscar-winner Martin Landau, who were working and popular when she was born (1965), thus her birth was actually documented in the trades and magazines.

In our experience, little of Dirt Now’s process actually happens. It may be the world that Cox imagines, the place where they constantly speculate on her marriage to David Arquette, her state or non-state of pregnancy, and where her friendship with Jennifer Aniston is carefully chronicled, as if there is a diarist in the room.

It’s funny that Cox’s Lucy is always encouraging her reporters to back up their sources, even though they are always going for the most lurid of reveals (ie, happy family man actor is actually gay and Lucy’s pap’s shoot him, Speedo-clad, in a tender embrace with a lover, who happens to be Lucy’s interior designer brother). Never mind that Lucy is actually creating these scenarios (we imagine this is the part that Cox likes best; she’ll show them, they make up stuff!)

It’s not easy to watch either. Like Nip/Tuck it’s relentlessly and often unnecessarily graphic.

There’s plenty of the gross, both literal and figurative, including charred faces (virginal pop star has Richard Pryor-like encounter with explosive crack-pipe), and the truly nauseating (Stewart’s Holt spews, not once, but twice, live worms and the camera nearly lovingly lingers on the rust-colored chunky vomit, ladened with wiggling worms).

Lucy’s kind-of boss, Brent, engages in a sex-only romp with an ambitious junior reporter – which seems a plot-line ideal for the series, but when the three-inch metal tube she’s forced him to keep up his pooper shooter falls out, clanging, during an office hostage situation, it’s cringingly disgusting, and maybe just too forced.

We get it, they’re nasty.

Technically, it’s slick. The cinematography portrays a daytime Los Angeles that’s so bright it needs to be viewed through shades or squinted eyes. El Lay at night is glossy and flashy and scary. There’s always something lurking in the night.

There’s no irony in the fact that Cox, recently stalked at Disneyland by photogs, dismisses all tabloids as Dirt. She called her show that. But she wants to have her cake and eat it, too. With frosting (which reminds us of the scene in which Don’s new girlfriend brings him a birthday cake, pulls off her panties and sits on it).

In summation, no matter how wealthy the media company that owns you, there isn't weekly magazine with offices like Dirt; yes, there may be some bribes, but the huge wads of cash (thrown at minor sources, even) is ridiculous; no matter how D-level a celeb is, they’re not going to walk into the ME’s office and pitch a planted story; Don would never always be the only photog on a stakeout and a mag isn’t going to rent major construction equipment for him to perch, in faux uniform, blocking a street, in for a fishing expedition (meaning, a situation where a celeb “might” be); even the biggest weekly celebrity magazine doesn’t have so massive a staff that it can send six reporters on an ME designed on-location story; no editor with her level or power, based on Los Angeles, lives like Lucy, or has her wardrobe. They just wish they did.















Power Hooks™

Stronger Than Suction Cups
Patented POWER HOOK™ design sticks to any high gloss surface

Umbra introduces a new generation of stick-to-surface technology, the POWER HOOK™. The patented design is stronger and more reliable than suction cups, and holds up to 15 pounds (7 kg) and does not loosen over time. The non-adhesive cling film pads stick to any high-gloss surface, such as tile, glass or mirror. They are easily repositioned and leave no residue after they are removed.

HOOKY
Utilizing POWER HOOK™ technology, Umbra designer David Quan has created HOOKY bath accessories, a collection of single and double hooks, a rectangular bin, corner caddy, fog-free plastic mirror and shelf with storage hooks, each with a truly dependable, long lasting hold in or out of the shower.

These storage pieces allow you to create more space, keep your bathroom uncluttered and have confidence that these accessories are well secured so go ahead and fill the caddies and shelf with shampoo, conditioners and lotions. And when you want to redecorate, you can use your HOOKY POWER HOOK™ again on any glossy surface.

STICKUP
POWER HOOK™ technology has also enabled Umbra to introduce STICKUP. No need for mounting hardware, STICKUP brackets attach directly to the window using POWER HOOK™ technology, so there are no holes to damage your walls. The rod is available in either a nickel or bronze finish and in two lengths 28-48" (71-122 cm) or 48-88" (122-224cm). Lawrence Chu has designed the end bracket to allow curtains to extend as far as possible.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007
















Bryan Ferry Does Dylan


Fulfilling a long-held dream, Bryan Ferry (seen right) will release a full album of classic songs written by Bob Dylan (seen left) in early spring. The album, titled Dylanesque, is scheduled for release on Capitol Music Group on June 19, 2007.



The album, Ferry’s 12th solo project, was largely recorded in one week with his touring band in the studio, resulting in a warm, live, acoustic sound. Among the songs recorded for the album are such definitive songs of the singer-songwriter canon as “The Times They Are A-Changin’,” “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door,” “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues,” “Simple Twist of Fate” and “All I Really Want To Do.” Aside from his songs of the Sixties and Seventies, Ferry also includes “Make You Feel My Love,” from Dylan’s acclaimed 1997 album Time Out of Mind. “The singer in me is overjoyed to be singing these songs,” Ferry said recently.



Roxy Music co-founder Brian Eno is credited with sonic enhancements on “If Not For You,” and other album guests include Robin Trower on guitar on “All Along the Watchtower.” Warren Ellis’s string arrangement is heard on “Positively 4th Street.”



Throughout his solo career, Bryan Ferry has been a brilliant interpreter of classics and standards of the rock, R&B and pop repertoire. He previously covered Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” in 1973, as the first single from his first solo album, These Foolish Things. “It Ain’t Me, Babe” appeared on 1974’s Another Time, Another Place. He also recorded “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” and “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” on his 2002 album, Frantic.


Custom Greetings For Each Cel Phone Contact

YouMail.com, a FREE web based application gives your cellphone's voicemail the flexibility of multiple custom greetings assignable to each of your contacts.
YouMail.com combines new multi-greeting feature with the web based voicemail management functionality of paid services like CallWave and Vonage. Users can easily manage/record greetings and listen to voicemails via the YouMail website as well as from the phone. Below is a little blurb about www.YouMail.com whose free service has been live since October '06 and who will launch its full featured application in April '07.

















Children of Men on DVD


The critically acclaimed, multi-Oscar®-nominated Children of Men, a riveting action thriller of astonishing power and impact set against a backdrop of deception and suspense, comes to DVD and HD-DVD on March 27, 2007 from Universal Studios Home Entertainment. Award-winning director Alfonso Cuarón's (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Y Tu Mamá También) powerful depiction of a world threatened by extinction stars Academy Award® nominees Clive Owen (Inside Man, Closer) and Julianne Moore (The Forgotten, Far from Heaven). The supporting cast includes Academy Award® winner Sir Michael Caine (The Prestige, Batman Begins), Chiwetel Ejiofor (Inside Man) and Charlie Hunnam (Cold Mountain). With a dazzling array of exclusive bonus features that takes viewers deep inside its fascinating and explosive world, the Children of Men DVD is priced at $29.98 SRP. Pre-order close is February 20, 2007.



Adapted from the novel by P.D James, Children of Men brilliantly imagines London in 2027, a world in which humankind has lost the ability to reproduce and one man is asked to risk everything for the survival of the human race. Theo Faron (Clive Owen) believes his activist days are behind him until he is asked to take on a dangerous mission that may save the future of the human race. Children of Men also stars Julianne Moore as the leader of the underground opposition group that enlists Theo's help, as well as veteran actor Michael Caine in a witty and wily portrayal of a lapsed idealist trapped in a nightmarish world.



Critics agree Children of Men is an extraordinary film. Scott Mantz of "Access Hollywood" declares Children of Men as "Powerful, provocative and absolutely brilliant!" The film is packed with "Exhilarating action" according to Peter Travers of Rolling Stone. It is "Magnificent...a unique and totally original vision" says Pete Hammond, Maxim.



Bonus, Behind the Scenes

The Children of Men DVD and HD-DVD include exclusive looks behind-the-scenes with the critically acclaimed film's creators and actors including:

· Deleted Scenes

· Possibility of Hope - A chilling documentary features the world's leading futurists and philosophers examining social and economic shifts that find expression in Children of Men.

· Theo and Julian - In exclusive on-set interviews, actors Clive Owen and Julianne Moore offer up insights and secrets about the complex and compelling characters they have created in Children of Men.

· Futuristic Designs - Director Alfonso Cuarón created an original and dynamic vision of the future for this film. Follow his vision as it goes from concept to seething cinematic life in this featurette.

· Visual Effects: Creating the Baby - Uncover the incredible visual effects used to create a life-like baby in the film.

· Men Under Attack - Children of Men features amazingly realistic scenes of the chaos and violence and groundbreaking, Oscar®-nominated cinematography by Emmanuel Lubezki, called by Rolling Stone's Peter Travers "a weaver of visual miracles." This mini-documentary breaks down two of the most terrifying scenes in the film - the café explosion and a car under violent attack from all sides - to show how the filmmakers created sequences in which "You don't just watch the scene, you live inside it, ducking each fresh, ferocious assault."


Synopsis



No children. No future. No hope.



In the year 2027, eighteen years since the last baby was born, disillusioned Theo (Clive Owen) becomes an unlikely champion of the human race when he is asked by his former lover (Julianne Moore) to escort a young pregnant woman out of the country as quickly as possible. In a thrilling race against time, Theo will risk everything to deliver the miracle the whole world has been waiting for. Co-starring Michael Caine, filmmaker Alfonso Cuaron's Children of Men is the powerful film Pete Hammond of Maxim calls "magnificent...a unique and totally original vision."



For more information please visit: www.childrenofmen.net



Cast and Filmmakers

Director: Alfonso Cuarón

Written By: Alfonso Cuarón, Timothy J. Sexton, David Arata, Mark Fergus, Hawk Ostby

Based on the Novel By: P.D. James

Produced By: Marc Abraham, Eric Newman, Hilary Shor, Tony Smith, Iain Smith

Director of Photography: Emmanuel Lubezki

Production Designers: Geoffrey Kirkland, Jim Clay

Film Editors: Alex Rodríguez, Alfonso Cuarón

Costume Designer: Jany Temime

Music By: John Taverner

Cast: Clive Owen, Julianne Moore, Michael Caine, Clare-Hope Ashitey, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Charlie Hunnam, Danny Huston


Georg Jensen Launch

Who: Estee Stanley and Cristina Ehrlich hosted a private dinner and exclusive preview at Jeff Klein’s Tower Bar in the Sunset Tower Hotel to celebrate the launch of Georg Jensen’s new 2007 luxury collection, Cave Diamond Jewelry Collection.

Guests included: Jessica Biel, Elisha Cuthbert (seen right), Amber Tamblyn, Monet Mazur, Anna Ortiz, Nia Long, Scott Speedman, Oliver Hudson and Erinn Bartlett, Jamie Tisch, Anna Getty and Colleen Bell.

What: Georg Jensen, Denmark’s most recognized international luxury goods company, launched an exquisite jewelry collection, Cave Diamond. Designed by Jacqueline Rabun, the Cave collection was inspired by the relationship of a woman and the world that surrounds her. The Cave collection consists of an array of stunning necklaces, rings and earrings in three distinct styles: white gold with solitaire diamond, yellow gold pave, and combination of silver and 18 carat yellow gold. The Cave Diamond Jewelry Collection will be available at Georg Jensen stores nationwide in April/May 2007. www.georgjensen.com When: Tuesday, February 20, 2007 Where: The Sunset Tower Hotel, The Tower Bar

Monday, March 05, 2007





















Le Doux’ 2007 Collection

Co-founded in 2005 by mother/daughter team Juliana and Marly Renz, Le Doux combines Brazilian sexiness and the relaxed Californian lifestyle to create an amazing swimwear collection for Summer 2007. Originally hailing from the beaches of Brazil, Juliana and Marly set out to develop a line which captures the Brazilian essence and style while “adding a little extra fabric” to meet the demand of the American customer. Designed in their Beverly Hills studio, all suits are manufactured in their own facility in Brazil by a team of expert seamstresses. All styles are made in either crochet or lycra fabric, and hand-embellished using beautiful semi-precious stones, crystals, wood, shells, mother of pearl, or embroidery.

Accented with frills, floral embellishments, custom hardware and beads certainly captures admirers attention, but it’s the sexy and flattering cuts that really turn up the heat. “We gain inspiration mainly from sourcing amazing materials, but also from different cultures, various time periods and the environment around us,” says Juliana about the collection. “These are suits we could wear on the beaches of Rio, Malibu or Maui for that matter, and not feel out of place.”






















Le Doux Bikinis

From their Website:

Le Doux - Mission

Founded in 2005, Le Doux combines Brazilian sexiness and the relaxed Californian lifestyle to create a unique swimwear collection. Inspired by the passion, sensuality and beaches of Brazil, all suits are cut Brazilian style, but with a little extra fabric for the "cultural adjustment". Each suit is made in our own manufacturing facility in Brazil by a team of expert seamstresses. All styles are made in either crochet or lycra fabric, and hand-embellished using beautiful semi-precious stones, crystals, wood, shells, mother of pearl, or embroidery.


Platinum Popular at NAACP

Kerry Washington, Regina Taylor, Tichina Arnold, Lisa Raye and Kimberly Elise sparkled in precious Platinum jewelry at the “38th Annual NAACP Image Awards” in Los Angeles on Friday.

Washington selected $1 million dollars worth of Platinum jewelry by Neil Lane, including a necklace and stud earrings.

Taylor wore several Platinum and diamond bracelets, and a Platinum, diamond and onyx ring by Neil Lane.

Arnold opted for Platinum, diamond and morganite cross earrings and ring by Erica Courtney (total $28,000).

Raye chose Platinum earrings and a ring by Erica Courtney.

Elise wore Platinum and diamond earrings and bracelets by Erica Courtney. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)