Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Hot News about "Rebecca Romijn"


‘Mystique And Me’: Rebecca Romijn & Jerry O’Connell Mix Mutant Powers, Marriage And… Pregnancy?


December 29, 2008 at 4:07 pm.

Rebecca Romijn, who brought blue-skinned, shape-shifting mutant Mystique to life in the “X-Men” films, hasn’t forgotten the role that earned her a place in comics fans’ hearts — and now she’s apparently reprising that role in a very special video with real-life husband Jerry O’Connell.

Recently posted to FunnyOrDie, this short video titled “Mystique is Pregnant” claims to be a “classic clip from the sitcom ‘Mystique and Me’ where Jerry gets Mystique pregnant with a non-shape-shifting baby.” And while I’m pretty darn sure there was never a “Mystique and Me” sitcom, I’m absolutely certain that this clip is freakin’ hilarious.

"Mystique is Pregnant" featuring Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn

Check out this classic clip from the sitcom "Mystique and Me" where Jerry gets Mystique pregnant with a non-shape-shifting baby.

Publication of disputed Holocaust memoir canceled.


You can know here Most Important news about the "Publication of disputed Holocaust memoir canceled"



AP – In this Sept. 25, 2008 file photo
Herman and Roma Rosenblat pose for a photo in their North Miami Beach


Sat Dec 27, 11:52 pm ET

NEW YORK – The publisher of a disputed Holocaust memoir has canceled the book, adding the name Herman Rosenblat to an increasingly long list of literary fakers and ending with a heartbreaking crash his story — embraced by Oprah Winfrey among others — of meeting his future wife at a concentration camp.

"I wanted to bring happiness to people," Rosenblat said in a statement issued Saturday through his agent, Andrea Hurst. "I brought hope to a lot of people. My motivation was to make good in this world."

Rosenblat's "Angel at the Fence" had been scheduled to come out in February, but Berkley Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA), withdrew the memoir following allegations by scholars, friends and family members that his tale was untrue.

"Berkley Books is canceling publication of `Angel at the Fence' after receiving new information from Herman Rosenblat's agent, Andrea Hurst," the publisher said in a statement. "Berkley will demand that the author and the agent return all money that they have received for this work."

A couple of days earlier, Berkley had offered a qualified defense of the book, saying it was a work of memory, a story whose truth was known only to the author.

"This was not Holocaust education but miseducation," Ken Waltzer, director of Jewish Studies at Michigan State University, said in a statement.

"Holocaust experience is not heartwarming, it is heart rending. All this shows something about the broad unwillingness in our culture to confront the difficult knowledge of the Holocaust. All the more important then to have real memoirs that tell of real experience in the camps."

Hurst, interviewed Saturday by The Associated Press, declined to offer details of Rosenblat's book deal, but said the amount of money was "not a great deal." She said that rights to the book also had been sold to publishers in Poland, France and other countries.

Rosenblat, 79, a resident of the Miami area, was virtually unknown to the general public until the 1990s when he began speaking of how he came to know his wife, Roma Radzicky. According to Rosenblat and his wife, he was a prisoner at a sub-camp of Buchenwald in Nazi Germany and she a young Jewish girl whose family was pretending to be Christian and lived nearby.

For months, they would meet on opposite sides of a barbed-wire fence, where she would sneak him apples and bread. Rosenblat was then transferred to another camp and the two lost touch, until the 1950s, when they were reunited by accident — on a blind date — in New York. They soon married and earlier this year celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.

The Rosenblats were interviewed twice over the years by Winfrey, who has called their romance "the single greatest love story ... we've ever told on the air." They have inspired a children's book and a feature film adaptation is scheduled to begin next year.

The film's producer, Harris Salomon of Atlantic Overseas Pictures, has vehemently defended Rosenblat and said in a statement Saturday that the production would continue. He noted that a "loose and fictionalized adaptation" had been planned all along and that "the integrity and the beauty of the story remains as a work of fiction."

Salomon also said that the movie, retitled "The Flower of the Fence," might address why the Rosenblats apparently "fabricated elements of their wartime love story" and that the author would donate any proceeds from the film to Holocaust related charities.

Unlike such discredited Holocaust memoirists as Misha Defonseca ("Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years") and Benjamin Wilkomirski ("Fragments"), Rosenblat is indeed a survivor and records prove that he was at the Buchenwald camp.

"All of the story about Herman in the concentration camps and the love and survival of him and his brothers, he states is true," Hurst, his agent, said in a statement.

"The way he lied for years and years was utterly reprehenisble," said Sidney Finkel, a longtime friend and fellow survivor. "On the other hand, I feel sorry for him, because at a very early age he experienced the Holocaust and never had a chance to grow up in a normal home. Maybe this explains why he did what he did."

Scholars long doubted the love story, citing, as one example, that the layout of the sub-camp made such an encounter at the fence virtually unthinkable (They would have met right by an SS barracks). Recent articles in The New Republic quoted friends and family members who were outraged by Rosenblat, so much so that one of his brothers stopped speaking to him.

Survivors have worried that Rosenblat would encourage Holocaust deniers, and the cancellation likely will revive the debate over why publishers don't fact check. Even after such fabrications as James Frey's "A Million Little Pieces," another Winfrey favorite, publishers have said that with more than 100,000 books coming out each year, fact-checking is too time-consuming and too expensive.

Penguin already has had to break ties with two authors this year.

In March, the publisher pulled Margaret B. Jones' "Love and Consequences" after the author acknowledged she had invented her story of befriending gang members in South-Central Los Angeles. One month later, Penguin parted with romance writer Cassie Edwards over allegations that she had lifted numerous passages from other sources.

Iraqi Journalist Throws Shoes at Bush.


Enjoy here unbelievable video "Iraqi Journalist Throws Shoes at Bush"

President George W. Bush dodges shoes thrown at him by Iraqi journalist The Brave Shoe Thrower Muntazer al-Zaidi from Al-Baghdadia television network, during press conference in Baghdad, December 14, 2008