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, February 15, 2008


Award Season: The Best of the Best and the Worst of Worst

This is the time -- Awards Season -- when the prettiest and likely the most expensive gowns are paraded around, as worn by Hollywood's elite. We take a look the good and way less so, scroll down.

Fashions represented here include SAG, the BAFTAs and the Grammys.
Gorgeous. Christina Applegate, in Elie Saab with Neil Lane jewelry. (SAG)


Gorgeous. Thandie Newton, in Alexander McQueen. (BAFTA)


Gorgeous. Tina Fey, in Philosophy di Alberta Ferretti. (SAG) Our Hero.


Gorgeous. Jenna Fischer, in Collette Dinnigan with a Swarovski clutch. (SAG)


Gorgeous. Marion Cotillard, in Nina Ricci with Chopard jewelry. (SAG)


Gorgeous. Faith Hill, in Valentino (Grammys)


Gorgeous. Fergie, in Calvin Klein and Cartier jewels (Grammys)



Gorgeous. Emily Blunt, in Marc Bouwer. (BAFTA)

























Sometimes a star gets it just right on the carpet. They look their best and it shows in the way they carry themselves. Their confidence is evident (or not) in their posing. Here, actress Kate Hudson, who must break away from the mediocrity of her film choices (in our humble opinion), brings the best and bad from two different events.

Kate Hudson, in Balmain with Cartier jewels. (SAG)

Kate Hudson, in Dior and Bulgari jewelry. (BAFTA)

Look at the tension in her face, even her hands are clutched into fists. Don't say it was probably cold, because, yes, hello, we know that. But here's gold lame gown with a kind of wheat pattern. She does not look like she likes it.

On the other hand, look at her at the SAG awards. Not only does she so resemble Goldie that she's her doppleganger, but she looks at ease, comfortable and happy. And the Balmain dress is stunning on her.

























You should've seen what Yoko Ono wore to the Grammys. We say this preemptively because of course we know that Julie Christie is an ICON. But really.

Julie Christie is an absolute legend. Legendary beauty, legendary screen presence. We feel a bit bad including her here. Of course, the fish fossil print pants throw this outfit way over to the right (and that's bad), but surely she could've tried different styling for these events. Same hair style, sort of the same pose, same facial expression.

Julie Christie, with a Roger Vivier clutch. (BAFTA)

Julie Christie, in Roberto Cavalli. (SAG)

The following are our least favorite gown choices for the SAG awards, the Grammys and the BAFTA awards.


These two were in competition for absolute worst of the party fashion picks (for the actual "winner," scroll down). It is way too obvious a choice. They are beautiful women (even though we couldn't tell you one song they sing, independently or together), but the excess! The ruffles! The flounce! The ever-apparent metallic touch! Ick.

Beyonce in Ellie Saab, sister Solange Knowles (Grammys)


Nelly Furtado is gorgeous. We can say that with utmost certainty, because we saw her up front and personal at Elton John's Oscar Party one year (don't get excited, it's not like we were guests; we were guest-less, working, covering it for our day job -- a different day job than we have now). This entire ensemble just isn't cutting it. Furtado's make-up artist has bronzed her so much that if she were at the Oscars, instead of the Grammys (their statuette is a gramaphone), she might be mistaken for a live representative of the Academy's token. The combination of overdone skin coloring, combined with her bleachy hair is a little too Miami Beach, no? The dress is a gorgeous color for her, but it is so ultimately unflattering. She is tiny. Tiny. But the way this dress is cut, it accentuates hips that aren't really there.

Furtado has just announced that she's in the early days of her second pregnancy. Furtado is engaged and has a four-year old daughter from a previous relationship.

Nelly Furtado, in Arthur Mendonça. (Grammys)


Please say Bob Mackie didn't design Cher's dress. Not that we're missing those iconic gowns from her variety TV show days, but they would, at least, be camp. This whole photo says a mess of things (too many). Cher looks like she's wearing a wig (and even if she is, it shouldn't look like she tried the polyester mop on at the Westfield Mall Wig Store), she looks tired and her dress is kind of a goth meets 1988 Fall Fun Dance, held at the Halloween Haunt at Knott's Berry Farm.

We know we're not the first to say it, but Miley freakin' Cyrus is 15. 15. Not only is she out too late, they've dressed her way too old. We could use another descriptive, less kind word, but we won't. Let's just say they need to let her dress her age, like she's going to a school dance (she's too young for Prom, for heaven's sake), not like she's about to strut down Hollywood Blvd. to Hyde.

Miley Cyrus, in Celine, with Cher. (Grammys)


This whole effect is very Junior League pre-Rush USC Pi Phi, circle 1974. Between the floral print and the Jaclyn Smith/Charlie's Angel hair, the soundtrack to this picture would be the Starland Vocal Band's Afternoon Delight.

The American Idol winner looks like an extra on the set of the movie Dick (with Michelle Williams and Kirsten Dunst -- if you haven't seen it, you must).

Carrie Underwood, in Zuhair Murad. (Grammys)


Earlier this week, as we were hurriedly walking up to our favorite donut shop (at the SW corner of Robertson Blvd. and Venice Blvd.) a guy walked by and said to us, "Ugly Betty??" It was the little cherry on the sundae of life this week has been. This designer is one of our peoples. She even hails from exactly the same place as my family. She is a major, major designer. But there is something very Charlotte Russe about this dress.

America Ferrera, in Monique Lhuillier. (SAG)


She and her husband seem like a very fun couple (even though she seems to have traded evenly, in looks and humor) and given her stunning all-American looks, it would appear she can wear anything. She can, but in this case, it's less well than on other occasions. It has a weird breast-plate and the gathering at the waist makes her appear pouffier around the middle than she actually is.

Rebecca Romijn, in Roberto Cavalli. (SAG)
























And the winner in the bad? Tilda Swinton, unforgettable in Orlando, but oh-so-forgettable in these two choices for the BAFTA Awards and the SAG Awards. She obviously prefers this style of the overly long skirt, chapel train and oversized formal blazer.

Tilda Swinton, Best Supporting Actress, in Dior. (BAFTA)

Tilda Swinton, in Haider Ackermann. (SAG)

Thursday, February 14, 2008

DRUMROLL.....


The Chairman of the Board has drawn a winner for BeansTalk's GLAMTHING Giveaway!

Congratulations to:

AUDREY EIG of Los Angeles

She will receive an "It's a Glam Thing" beauty & accessory basket filled with products including: SKINN Cosmetics by Dimitri James, Abrione Skin Care, Dazzle Dry Quick Dry nail Polish System, Clean Logic Bath & Body care, Naked Glow's The Body Lift, The Lip Lift and Bronzer, earrings by Twitterbird Creations, Curls hair care, Starlet Cosmetics brushes, a Fi Hair Gretchen brush, nubar cuticle oils, product from The Betty Boop store, Nutra Luxe MD Plus preservative free skin care & more. For more information visit www.itsaglamthing.com. This basket is valued at more than $650.

Many hanks to everyone who entered!!




At the fashion intersection of deep royal tones and gothic punk rock suggestions is Imperial Anarchy. Inky velvets, tight knit wools and shiny silks reference days of high ranking regal guards. The fresh prevalence of dresses and wide legged pants worn with a strong eccentric womanly attitude makes it modern. Charging ahead is a powerful new wardrobe palette of smoky plum, royal purple, indigo, charcoal and dove grey accented by gold or silver details. A uniform makeover is taking the reigns.

Beauty of the now is deliberate and not matching: richly polished nails and matte clean skin are complemented by either dark sophisticated eye makeup or red lips. The way to show off hands this autumn/winter is with almond shaped nails drenched in velvety colors of pewter, plum and deep red.

The Imperial Anarchy collection debuted on the Fashion Week runways in New York and London. Hyde In The Dark was worn on the models at Behnaz Sarafpour, Monique Lhuillier, Kai Kuhne, Ashley Isham and Chris Han. Rock Royalty premiered at Miss Sixty and Julia Chancey with a similar custom blended shade created for 3.1 Phillip Lim. Crimson Uprising showed at Ben de Lisi. House Of Rebels complemented the palettes seen on Marc Bouwer and Malan Breton’s runways. Crowned glimmered on the fingertips at Atil Kutoglu.

Each 1⁄2 ounce enamel retails for $6.00. CND products are sold only in professional salons and spas. For local retail information, call 800-833-NAIL or visit www.cnd.com.


Must Have Tarte
ready, set, glow kit ($45) limited-edition makeup set ($94 value)


From lids to lips, cheekbones to collarbones, this scintillating set offers everything you need to get ready for a big night out. This sephora.com-exclusive set includes:

* mini cheek stain in tipsy (sheer shimmery peach)
--skinvigorating™ ingredients: oil free, alcohol free, paraben free, preservative free, phthalate free, dermatologist tested
* double-ended lipgloss in elle & emmett (sparkly pink and lilac)
--skinvigorating™ ingredients: jojoba seed oil, mineral pigments, paraben free, mineral oil free, phthalate free, dermatologist tested
* rest assured brightening wand
--skinvigorating™ ingredients: cocoa seed butter, shea butter, mineral pigments, water, beeswax, phthalate free, dermatologist tested
* mineral powder bronzer in park avenue princess (light bronze)
--skinvigorating™ ingredients: vitamin A, C & E, mineral pigments, mineral oil free, phthalate free, dermatologist tested
* mini glistening powder in sugar daddy (sparkly champagne)
--skinvigorating™ ingredients: mineral pigments and silk powder

Available exclusively at www.sephora.com

Pretty VD Gifts




Les Oeufs Des Colores
Just in time for spring, our colored egg soap collection is back, and has been reinvented with bright, bold seasonal colors. Enveloped in a gorgeous French toile pattern, the box is embellished with a satin ribbon and To/From tag. Available in a nest dish with 3 Pink soaps. $26.75

Soap Stone
Gianna Rose artists create the soap stone, an element believed to bring harmony and balance to everyday life. This spa-inspired soap contains fragrant extracts of rosemary and mint to relax and rejuvenate your mind, while its organic style acts as a décor enhancement. Packaged in a striking faux bois gift box, made with recycled components. $38 to $52 www.giannarose.com

Robin’s Egg Soap
This vegetable based, french-milled soap is imbued with the soothing extracts of chamomile and meadowsweet. Oatmeal and wheat bran give these eggs their exfoliating speckles. Three one ounce egg soaps come boxed and nestled in a porcelain bowl or six egg soaps come nestled side by side in a slider box.
All are presented in letterpress printed, iridescent robin's egg blue boxes. $22 to $27 www.giannarose.com


Kiwi Best Linden Leaves

Created to help you put your best foot forward, the footcare collection includes everything you need for a sole-full experience. Create your very own pedi-spa sanctuary with indulgent ingredients that restore, revive and refresh feet. As a pre-pedicure prep to soften skin or as a relaxing rescue for fatigued feet, several spoonfuls of the milky, oil-rich foot soak (MSRP: $18.95) will renew skin and spirits from heel to toe. Put a spring in your step with foot reviver (MSRP: $18.95), a cooling, refreshing formula with essential oils of sage and lemongrass that also acts as a natural insect deterrent. Smooth skin has never been so simple with foot scrub(MSRP: $19.95), an exfoliating, cleansing and moisture-replenishing blend of natural pumice, ground apricot seed, grape seed oil, cocoa butter, shea butter, sage and lemongrass, and massage cream (MSRP: $19.95), a rich, hydrating formulation of shea butter, beeswax, cocoa butter, grape seed oil, cucumber, sage and lemongrass.Your feet will say “spaahh” anywhere with footspa minikit (MSRP: $21.95), which includes a take-it-with-you trio of a natural pumice exfoliating stone, foot scrub, and massage cream.



Soft, youthful hands are always at your finger tips with Linden Leaves’ new hand and nail treatment. This all-in-one formulation is a triple threat against dry skin and cuticles, weak nails and age spots. As part of Linden Leaves’ herbalist collection, hand and nail treatment includes the best beauty benefits from the pure ingredients, home-grown botanicals and exotic nature of New Zealand. A non-greasy, moisture-locking blend of shea butter, aloe vera, evening primrose oil and sesame oil hydrates hands, while sweet almond oil strengthens nails and mulberry extract helps fade hyper-pigmentation spots. The treatment is lightly fragranced with a refreshing green tea scent and a blend of essential oils. hand and nail treatment’s fast-absorbing formulation contains no coloring or synthetic additives, making it ideal for even sensitive skin. For treatment that travels with your lifestyle, hand and nail treatment is available in two sizes, a 5.4 oz. tube that has a flip top, as well as a travel-friendly 1 oz. tube with a screw cap that is perfect for stashing in your purse or at your desk. $8.95

For more information or to view the full Linden Leaves collection, please visit www.lindenleavesusa.com.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

GLAMTHING GIVEAWAY Update!

Wow!

We had entries for the GLAMTHING Giveaway from across the country!

We even had two Canadians enter.

We were stunned by the great turnout of contestants.

Check back tomorrow for the announcement of the winner!

LAST DAY TO ENTER! LAST DAY TO ENTER!


Glam-Thing GIVEAWAY! Your LAST CHANCE TO ENTER

The BIGGEST gift basket giveway BeansTalk has had!

You have until 8 p.m. 13 February 2008 to enter for a chance to win! (Winner will be chosen at random by BeansTalk's CEO).

One lucky winner will receive an "It's a Glam Thing" beauty & accessory basket filled with products including: SKINN Cosmetics by Dimitri James, Abrione Skin Care, Dazzle Dry Quick Dry nail Polish System, Clean Logic Bath & Body care, Naked Glow's The Body Lift, The Lip Lift and Bronzer, earrings by Twitterbird Creations, Curls hair care, Starlet Cosmetics brushes, a Fi Hair Gretchen brush, nubar cuticle oils, product from The Betty Boop store, Nutra Luxe MD Plus preservative free skin care & more. For more information visit www.itsaglamthing.com. This basket is valued at more than $650.

To enter, please email info@beanstalkbiz.com with GLAMTHING in the subject line. Enter before 8 p.m. 13 February 2008. Winner will be announced on Valentine’s Day. Good luck!!! Please enter only once. Please be sure to include your name, contact information and where you'd like the basket to be sent if you win!~!



The Latest from red earth

Red earth Eye Perfection Concealer
Hide imperfections around the eye area with red earth’s newest secret agent, Eye Perfection Concealer. Joining red earth’s core collection of products available year-round, Eye Perfection Concealer works double duty to mask dark under-eye circles while it minimizes fine lines and pores around the eye area. Late nights, dehydration and stress can all lead to raccoon-like dark circles that range from blue to purple in color, as well as encourage and enhance the signs of aging. Available in three shades, Cream for light skin tone, Rosy Beige for medium skin tone and Sand for dark skin tone, the long-lasting, light-weight fluid formulation blends easily to create flawless, even skin tone around the eyes.
Eye Perfection Concealer is also formulated with red earth’s signature hydrating complex which encourages the skins’ water-binding capability to lock in moisture around the thinner-skinned eye area, as well as fermented Black Tea to minimize pores, crinkles and fine lines. Perfect eyes are just one touch away with Eye Perfection Concealer’s fine tip applicator. For expert application with the ease of a makeup artist, Eye Perfection Concealer also includes a step-by-step instruction booklet. Dia Foley, Creative Director-North America advises, “Always apply a concealer that is one shade lighter than your skin tone on top of foundation and before you add powder—this will ensure that the concealer does not wipe off. red earth’s Eye Perfection Concealer will be available exclusively at Ulta nationwide and at Ulta.com beginning March 2008 for a retail price of $15.00.
Red earth Lip Collection
red earth introduces a new collection of glosses and pencils designed to instantly plump up the volume on your pout: Lip Wonder Plumping Collection. Formulated with a non-invasive Microsphere technology that is based on dehydrated sponge-like fillers that draw in moisture and expand, Lip Wonder will give lips a fuller, line-free and more youthful appearance while providing glossy color and shine. Prime and define lips with High Shine Lip Plumping Pencil, a multi-purpose pencil that plumps lips while it contours, prevents bleeding and feathering from lipstick, and provides a base for lip gloss. Easily blend-able with a light texture, the formulation includes moisture-locking natural Hydrolyzed Wheat Proteins, which encourage lips to plump, along with conditioning and hydrating Soybean Oil and Aloe Extract. Available in four universal shades, Candy Love (pink), Sweet Port (red), Fizzy Apricot (Peach) and Creamy Caramel (beige), lips will get the full treatment. With a wave of a wand, High Shine Lip Plumping Gloss works its magic to deliver soft, full and plump lips with ultra-glossy, gorgeous sheer color coverage. Formulated with lip-plumping Marine Collagen Microspheres, natural moisturizing agents and a flirty vanilla fragrance, this high-shine gloss also creates a 3-D effect for added volume. Lips get the full service with eight sheer, glossy hues including Cherish Me (pink), Jet Set (red), Milky Way (nude pink), Ladies Punch (pink plum), Mystery Rose (nude brown), Peachy Girl (peach), Pure Desire (nude) and Sugar Star (clear).
red earth’s Lip Wonder Plumping Collection will be available exclusively at Ulta nationwide and at Ulta.com beginning March 2008. High Shine Lip Plumping Pencil will be available for $14.00 and High Shine Lip Plumping Gloss for $16.00.

www.redearth.com



Heavenly 7s

Two of the women at our day job are not only super slender, but have long legs so any jeans are flattering on them. Still they both have 7 for all mankind jeans and those are probably the most flattering. They both have been at the job longer than I have (one for only ever-so-slightly longer) and are both always cold. Long jeans, it seems, are a part of the keep-warm, stay stylish uniform.

Don’t even get us started on us and these jeans. We like to convince ourselves that we won’t ever buy pricey pants because we are (really, truly) going to lose weight. Hence our choices of under $20 petite jeans – super uncool. But we wear long shirts that cover the portion that would reveal our nerdy denim.

Still, you can be either a boy or girl starlet and still love your 7 For all mankind jeans. Here, Entourage star Adrian Grenier and Friday Night Lights star Minka Kelly both rock their 7Fam jeans while out and about. www.7forallmankind.com


Did You Know….

That Jordache Enterprises (yes, those jeans of our youth) is the parent company for the following brands?

Jordache
US Polo Assn.
Dittos
Earl Jean
Blue Star
Kikit
Maurice Sasson
Fubu Ladies
Gasoline
Gas
Airport
Xoxo

We didn’t. We like it when we learn something everyday. Seen above, Kristen Davis of “Sex and the City,” who was announced as the face of Kikit (it's Heidi Klum for Jordache) in 2006 April.

www.jordachecorporate.com

Tuesday, February 12, 2008



If you order by 12 noon Wednesday, February 13, she can receive gorgeous flowers from Mark’s Garden (florist to the stars!), on Valentine’s Day.

www.marksflowers.com





































BBC America’s

Babylon, Robin Hood
Return


Hotel Babylon, a Carnival Films production for BBC, returns for Season 3 (8 x 60). It is distributed by BBC Worldwide.

Robin Hood, a BBC America co-production with Tiger Aspect Productions and the BBC, is back for Season 2 (13 x 65). It is distributed by BBC Worldwide.

This season Hotel Babylon kicks off with a special guest appearance by American Idol’s Paula Abdul. Meantime, Charlie’s (Max Beesley) been promoted to manager, has to deal with the fallout from bad reviews and try to work with Emily, the new posh PR expert at the hotel. Hotel Babylon premieres Wednesday, March 12, 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.

With no tights in sight, the new season of Robin Hood finds Robin (Jonas Armstrong) and his motley gang even more determined in their battle to defeat the ruthless Sheriff of Nottingham (Keith Allen) and his dastardly accomplice, Guy of Gisbourne (Richard Armitage; BeansTalk note: we are huge fans of Armitage). Accompanied by the beautiful Marian (Lucy Griffiths), the brave heroes battle to rid Nottingham of poverty and despair forever. But that means the two young lovers - Robin and Marian - must make the ultimate sacrifice. Robin Hood premieres Saturday, April 26, 9:00 p.m. ET/PT.

National Geographic's 'Strange Days On Planet Earth'
Hosted By Edward Norton Returns For Second Season On Pbs In April

A series of seemingly unrelated events and issues are bubbling up from the depths of the world's water supply, forcing scientists and investigators to sleuth out solutions to some bizarre mysteries. What connection does over-fishing in Ghana have to a stench that occasionally overwhelms the coastal villages of Namibia? Why are majestic seabirds starving on remote Pacific Islands? What could be causing the flesh of America's most iconic fish, the striped bass, to melt? The cyclical causes and effects of these problems and the search for answers are chronicled in two new hours of the National Geographic series "Strange Days on Planet Earth," narrated by actor and environmentalist Edward Norton and airing on PBS stations Wednesday, April 23 (check local listings).

The acclaimed National Geographic series dives into the health of the world's water system. Shot on location around the world, the two new episodes, "Most Dangerous Catch" and "Dirty Secrets," follow teams of scientists as they investigate puzzling phenomena in fresh and sea water. These high-tech detective stories, with the fate of the planet at stake, expose some surprising links between catastrophic environmental events around the world. The series aims to deepen our understanding of these complex issues and inspire us all to take action.

National Geographic's "Strange Days on Planet Earth" is produced by Sea Studios Foundation in collaboration with National Geographic Television. The two-hour series has been underwritten by ITT Corporation, with additional support from the Packard Foundation and the National Science Foundation. The series will be complemented by materials for educators and a comprehensive Web site at www.pbs.org/strangedays.

"Our goal with 'Strange Days' is to help people understand that no environmental issue stands on its own," said Mark Shelley, executive director of the Sea Studios Foundation. "Every issue the planet faces, even one as seemingly distant to our lives as the increased trade of bushmeat in Ghana, has ripple effects for all species -- including ours -- around the world."

Series host Edward Norton, an award-winning actor, writer and director, is a dedicated environmental activist. He started the BP Solar Neighbors Program, which helps low-income families reduce their energy costs through the use of solar power. His involvement in "Strange Days" reiterates his commitment to preserving the planet and its resources.

Episode 1: "Most Dangerous Catch," premiering Wednesday, April 23, 2008 (check local listings)
In the West African nation of Ghana, olive baboons are ransacking crops and terrorizing villagers. Further down the coast in Namibia, a once rich fishing ground is struggling to recover while putrid fumes are exploding from the ocean depths, spewing greenhouse gases into the air. These and other events are linked to one activity -- over-fishing. It's become increasingly clear that our massive demands on the ocean are impacting life far beyond the shoreline, including Earth's own life-support systems. Can we reduce fishing pressures, restore fish stocks and protect ocean habitats in time to safeguard the health of life in the sea, on land and ultimately ourselves?

Episode 2: "Dirty Secrets," premiering Wednesday, April 23, 2008 (check local listings)
Scientists and citizens across the world are scrambling to solve a set of disturbing mysteries unfolding along the shores of rivers, estuaries, islands and the sea. Striped bass are succumbing to flesh-eating bacteria in Chesapeake Bay. Majestic seabirds are starving in Hawai'i. Coral reefs are weakening under a growing assault of invisible contaminants. Meanwhile, a known hormone-disrupting chemical is showing up in streams, rivers and other bodies of water across the nation, potentially jeopardizing the health of animals and humans. These mysteries share a similar culprit. Something is amiss in our water supply, and experts are racing the clock to find clues and devise lasting solutions.























Crucifixion

The History Channel

Throughout history, crucifixion has been one of the cruelest, most demeaning and excruciating ways to die. Since the Romans chose this as their method to execute Jesus Christ, most people wrongly associate crucifixion as a strictly sacred or religious symbol. In fact, crucifixions didn't start with the Romans. About 500 years earlier, the first documented account of crucifixion occurred when the Persian King Darius crucified 3,000 political opponents in Babylon. In 332 B.C. Alexander the Great ordered 2,000 survivors crucified after the siege of Tyre. During the rule of Caligula, Jews were even crucified in the local amphitheater to entertain the citizens of Alexandria. Crucifixion has traveled across history, empires, cultures...and is even still in use today.

But who came up with this severe method of execution? How did various civilizations use it and for what crimes? How exactly is a crucifixion carried out? What do victims really die from: shock, suffocation, asphyxiation, or heart trauma? What effect did it have as a deterrent? In an attempt to solve these mysteries, a crucifixion experiment will be performed by a team of forensic experts. They'll reconstruct a 2000-year-old body using the only physical evidence of a crucifixion ever discovered. During the reconstruction process, experts will explore the history and science of crucifixion: why victims were flogged and then forced to carry the horizontal beam, a.k.a. crossbar, to their execution site where soldiers then proceeded to hammer nails into the wrists (and not the hands as was commonly believed.) Experiments on cadavers have shown that people hanging on a cross with nails through their palms will fall to the ground within a relatively short time, pulled by gravity. And yet, the Bible states that it took about six hours for Jesus to die up on the cross.

Filmed on historic locations in the Middle East including the Church of the Holy Sepulcher and the Garden of Gethsemane in the old city of Jerusalem where Jesus was executed, Crucifixion investigates the historical record, with a special emphasis on the death of Jesus Christ. Modern day footage will show real crucifixions that take place in the Philippines. Brief recreations will be used along with extensive CGI animation and CSI forensic-style graphics to illustrate the different types of crucifixion techniques throughout history and how this form of punishment eventually kills its victim.

PREMIERE: Sunday, March 23 at 8pm/12am ET/PT, two hours. The History Channel


Images: These are both images capturing the crucifixion of St. Peter. There is an early church tradition that Peter insisted upon being crucified head downward, because he did not feel worthy to be crucified in the same way as was his Lord. Shown above is a detail from the "Crucifixion of Peter" (1481-82) by Florentine painter Filippino Lippi (1457-1504), fresco, 230 x 598 cm., Cappella Brancacci, Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, Italy.

The Crucifixion of St. Peter (Crocefissione di san Pietro) (1600) is a work by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, painted for the Cerasi Chapel of Santa Maria del Popolo in Rome. Across the chapel is a second Caravaggio depicting the The Conversion of Saint Paul on the Road to Damascus (1601). On the altar between the two is an Assumption of the Virgin Mary by Annibale Carracci. The painting depicts the martyrdom of St. Peter by crucifixion - Peter asked that his cross be inverted so as not to imitate his mentor, Christ, hence he is depicted upside-down.


Return to the Amazon with Jean-Michel Cousteau: Ocean Adventures and the next generations of the Cousteau family 2 & 9 April on PBS


The Amazon: The most powerful of the world's rivers, its rapid transformation will alter the global climate. Emptying into the great Atlantic Ocean, it flows through the world's largest tropical rainforest, the vast, natural theater where evolution has gone wild, creating the greatest biodiversity of any area on the planet. Twenty-five years ago, Jean-Michel Cousteau explored this fabled region with his father, the legendary Jacques Cousteau. Since then, an area the size of Texas has been deforested. With an intimate look at recent changes, Jean-Michel returns with a new expedition for the signature PBS environmental series, Jean-Michel Cousteau: Ocean Adventures. Combining science and discovery with expert story-telling and astonishing footage, the new season premieres nationally with Return to the Amazon, airing in two parts on April 2 at 8pm, and April 9 at 8pm (both 60 minutes), and is narrated by the acclaimed actor, Delroy Lindo.

Traveling down the Amazon River basin with Jean-Michel are his children Fabien and Celine (the three of them are in the image, above) and his crew of adventurous oceanauts. Over the course of ten months, through wet and dry seasons, in the water and on land, the team encounters debilitating challenges and uplifting discoveries throughout the multiple expeditions and forays into both wild and developed regions. All experienced ocean divers, they now have the unique experience of investigating the murky waters of the Amazon basin, where there are more species of fish than there are in the entire Atlantic Ocean! The team encounters many unusual, rare species and surprises, including swimming with an anaconda, the world's largest - and perhaps most dangerous - snake; going nose-to-nose with the jacaré, the Amazon version of the crocodile; and playfully swimming with beautiful pink river dolphins.

Over 4,000 miles long, and without a single bridge crossing it, this is the world's longest and widest river. Negotiating it is not easy. Covering an area larger than the continental United States, the team travels together on long river passages and also breaks into small, mobile groups, sending Fabien and Celine on trips to investigate more leads. From the Brazilian city of Manaus - a hub of commerce on the main Amazon tributary, the Rio Negro - to protected areas in the Amazon like Xixuaú and Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve, they investigate projects and places that are finding solutions to the destruction of the land and river. From the mouth of the Amazon at the Atlantic Ocean to a glacier in the Peruvian Andes, they explore incredible natural phenomena and the catastrophic consequences of climate change and deforestation.

Issues, challenges and problems that exist in the Amazon have a direct connection to the rest of the world, especially through global commerce. Expansive soy farms, lumber companies, commercial fishing, illegal animal trafficking, and more come under close scrutiny, but the Cousteau family and Ocean Adventures team uncover both inspiring and shocking stories throughout Brazil and Peru. They investigate the crucial role of native people in sustaining the natural rainforest and river system, and visit indigenous peoples in small, remote villages, as well as in large, protected reserves. New business models such as ecotourism, fish farms, organized fish monitoring by markets and fishermen, and developing and exporting sustainable rainforest products and medicines are all examples of potential solutions to global issues, as clear progress is made in the Amazon.

From this region of urgency and conflict, where human enterprise and expansion not only compromise the health and ecology of the river and rainforest basin, but truly inflict consequences on a global scale, come new beacons of hope and sustainability. The fight for the future of the Amazon and its people is underway, and Return to the Amazon presents solutions already in motion for keeping the forest alive and thriving.

Return to the Amazon is shot in high-definition and is narrated by Delroy Lindo, the Tony award-nominated actor whose films include "Malcolm X," "Crooklyn," "Get Shorty," "Romeo Must Die" and "The Cider House Rules." He most recently starred in the 2007 holiday hit, "This Christmas."

Jean-Michel Cousteau: Ocean Adventures is produced by KQED and Ocean Futures Society. The exclusive corporate sponsor is The Dow Chemical Company.



The Four-Winged Dinosaur
Tuesday, February 26 at 8pm ET/PT on PBS
pbs.org/nova/microraptor


In 2002, the discovery of a beautiful and bizarre fossil astonished scientists and reignited the debate over the origin of flight. With four wings and superbly preserved feathers, the creature was like nothing paleontologists had ever seen before. Now, NOVA travels to the Chinese stone quarry where the fossil was discovered--a famed dinosaur treasure-trove--and teams up with the world's leading figures in paleontology, biomechanics, aerodynamics, animation, and scientific reconstruction to perform an unorthodox experiment: a wind tunnel flight test of a scientific replica of the ancient oddity. Find out whether this 130 million-year-old relic takes flight on The Four-Winged Dinosaur, premiering Tuesday, February 26 at 8pm ET/PT on PBS (check local listings).

Dubbed Microraptor, the crow-sized fossil is one of the smallest dinosaurs ever found and one of the most controversial, challenging conventional theories and assumptions about the evolution of flight. But how did Microraptor use its wings?

Did Microraptor array its arm- and leg-mounted wings in the style of an early-20th-century biplane to produce high lift at low speed? Did it use them to create a single lifting surface for efficient, swift gliding? Did it employ some combination of these two methods? Or were the extra wings useless for flight and likely to have been for some other purpose, such as attracting a mate?

To answer these questions, NOVA interviews Chinese paleontologist Xu Xing, who first recognized the importance of Microraptor and gave it its name; paleontologist Mark Norell and artist Mick Ellison of the American Museum of Natural History; paleontologist Larry Martin of the University of Kansas; anatomist Farish Jenkins of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University; and aerodynamicist Kenny Breuer of Brown University.

Artists have historically played an important role in paleontology by helping to reconstruct the appearance and behavior of ancient animals. In the case of Microraptor, two completely different reconstructions were made, one at the American Museum of Natural History, and the other at the University of Kansas, based on different specimens and different techniques.

In addition, NOVA commissioned a "flight-ready" wind tunnel model of Microraptor complete with feathers and articulating joints.

The different reconstructions play into a long-running scientific controversy over the origin of flight in birds. For years the debate has been a standoff between two camps--those who believe dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds, and those who do not.

Believers in the dinosaur-bird connection have generally assumed that flight must have begun from the ground up, with fast-running dinosaurs that eventually got airborne as feathered arms evolved into wings and running leaps evolved into powered flight.

Images: Perhaps many dinosaurs had feathered feet? Here, artist Jason Brougham of the American Museum of Natural History shows how Sinornithosaurus ("Chinese bird-lizard") might have looked with a full set of feathers.
Microraptor
, a headline-making, four-winged dinosaur, is just one piece of the baffling puzzle of how birds evolved from reptiles.



Skeptics of the dinosaur-bird link say it would have been physically impossible for running dinosaurs to overcome gravity and get off the ground. It made more sense for flight to evolve from the trees down, with small, arboreal reptiles that glided from the treetops on their way to becoming full-fledged fliers. And that seemed to rule out dinosaurs, which, presumably, couldn't climb trees.

On NOVA, Mark Norell of the American Museum of Natural History is one of the proponents of the "birds-are-dinosaurs" hypothesis, which is the predominant view among most paleontologists, while Larry Martin of the University of Kansas speaks out for the minority view that birds descended from non-dinosaur tree dwellers.

Tantalizingly, Microraptor is the unexpected missing link that has reignited the debate and just might settle the issue--or at the very least deepen our understanding of the long-ago era when the ancestors of birds first took to the air.


Images: Producer Mark Davis (in background) scopes out a scene with puppeteer Fred Stinson. Davis first explored the dinosaur-bird connection in his 1991 NOVA "Case of the Flying Dinosaur."

Resembling a creature from Jurassic Park, the lappet-faced vulture offers striking visual evidence of how closely akin birds are to dinosaurs.

Monday, February 11, 2008


Figures from the Audit Bureau of Circulation, via gawker.com (double click on image to enlarge)



Don't forget to enter BeansTalk's Amazing It's a GLAM-THING Gift Bag Giveaway! Winners chosen 13 February 2008, announced 14 February 2008. Scroll down for details. To enter, send an email to info@beanstalkbiz.com with GLAM THING in the subject line and your name and contact information in the body of the email!!

Images are from skinn.com cosmetics and Starlet Cosmetics, who are participants in our giftbag giveway!



Chopard: A Sparkly Choice for Grammys


Rihanna Nominee
This multiple nominee sparkled in Chopard’s extraordinary diamond barrel cuff (27 carats), diamond stud earrings and their So Happy diamond ring.



Natalie Cole Presenter

Natalie shined in Chopard’s spectacular rose-cut yellow diamond drop earrings (27 carats) and an Ashoka-cut fancy yellow diamond ring with pave band (12.5 carats).


Jill Scott Nominee

Nominated for Best R&B album and Female Performance, this songstress shimmered in Chopard’s diamond spiral drop earrings (8 carats) and an amazing multi-color pearl and diamond pave balloon ring.



Kimberly Williams Paisley

Attending with her triple nominated husband Brad Paisley, Kimberly selected to wear
Chopard’s heart-shaped diamond pendant necklace and Happy Heart earrings set in white gold.

(Images: Singer Rihanna arrives at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 10, 2008, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ Chris Pizzello); Country artist Brad Paisley and his wife Kimberly Williams Paisley arrive at the 50th Annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 10, 2008, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)


Ice, Ice Baby: Introducing The IcePod

We’re not sure how much these cost, but we have heard they’re more than the actual iPod it’s covers. BeansTalk staffers are notorious for changing the covers of our cel phone on a regular basis, in an effort to protect and look good. We’re now doing the same thing to our MacBooks. We got the CFO’s castoff and it suits us fine.

Meanwhile, our winter holiday gift from the CFO and CEO, an iTouch, has yet to be used much (well, at all). We’ve already experimented with covers – we are notorious for dropping phones, Blackberrys, etc. Things seem to fly from our paws.

A while back, we had Nextel phones – which have at last (mercifully) lost their urban-audience appeal and incredibly annoying push-to-talk feature that people somehow felt was perfectly ok to use (translate scream into, crackle screech back) in public, like while waiting in line at Ross-Dress-For-Less. The one good thing is that the Nextel phone we had was supposedly made from the same material as football helmets and was super sturdy. As many times as we dropped it, we can attest to that.

But we digress. We’ve never been to Sundance (as in Sundance Film Festival) but we’re told it’s a total Swagfest. And at the most recent chilly-but-popular film fest, icepod.com was giving celebs a special edition ipod (and its derivatives) cover, made of 14K gold with diamonds. This is all second-hand, so don’t quote us on it.

It’s called high-end, wearable jewelry for your iPod and it’s a very fresh company, only weeks old.

Anyway, they’re very pretty and we have a very soft spot for sparkly pretty things (deep down we are still a chatty 8-year-old girl).

This is from their fresh website:

icepod is a new company that recently launched at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. We produce high-end, luxurious wearable jewelry for iPods, the iPhone, and other popular hand-held gadgets. icepod is the world's first exclusive line of fully customizable iPod jewelry and is headquartered in Dallas, with offices in New Orleans and Tampa.


icepod wearable charms are available for various iPod styles (30gb & 60gb Video, 2nd Generation Shuffle, 2nd Generation Nano, 80gb & 160gb Classic, and Touch), the iPhone, and other hand helds, such as BlackBerrys and popular cell phones. icepod can be completely customized to accommodate your tastes and style. icepod boasts a pure, brilliant line of charms made of precious metals, such as 14K gold, sterling silver, and platinum, and precious stones ranging from diamonds to sapphires to rubies. A costume line is also available and is fully customizable, as well. Custom laser engraving for all products is available.


Beginning March 2008, icepod will launch a new website that will feature its first limited edition piece, available for purchase on a first come, first serve basis. Periodically, icepod will release a new, exclusive product only available on the website and in very limited quantities. Don't miss the opportunity to be one of only 100 people that will get these exclusive, luxurious pieces. www.icepod.com

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Terrible Tattoo No More

Bad tatts are everywhere. And, for one day only, Southern California’s leading tattoo removal chain, Dr. Tattoff, has made it their mission to rid Angelenos of old body graffiti by offering free tattoo removal. For the first time ever, Los Angeles’s tattooed community will congregate in one place to remove their bad body art.

On February 25, 2008 anyone who shows up between the hours of 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM at Dr. Tattoff’s Beverly Hills office, located at 8500 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90211 will receive free treatment. Patients will be treated on a first-come first-served basis and can get up to six inches treated.

The idea for Operation: Ink-Off originated with Dr. Tattoff Medical Director, Dr. Will Kirby. As one of the country’s foremost experts on tattoo removal and current star of E!’s Dr. 90210, Dr. Kirby has met many people who have tattoos they want removed, but who lack motivation to begin the removal process. “In my business, I am constantly meeting people who want to get their tattoos taken off but for one reason or another have not started. It’s a new year, and I thought what a great way to help people by cleaning up their old graffiti and giving them a fresh start.”

Dr. Kirby will be on-hand to meet and treat patients, along with Dr. Tattoff nurse and former “Bachelor” winner, Sarah Brice.

Other attendees include Dr. Tattoff founder “My Fair Brady” star Christopher Knight, actor Jai Rodriguez, and “Bachelor” star actor Charlie O’Connell.

Dr. Tattoff is cleaning up Los Angeles, one canvas at a time

Dr. Tattoff has performed more than 20,000 tattoo removal treatments. http://www.drTattoff.com

Scroll down for some of the net’s worst offenders (most from badtattoos.com)