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Getting the best hotel room
Melissa Ruggieri
September 07, 2008 12:54 AM

Depending upon my mood and level of exhaustion when I arrive at a hotel, my reaction to a cruddy room falls anywhere between shut-up-and-take-it and I’m sorry, do I maintain a silver Marriott card so you can stick me in the equivalent of a dorm room and charge $250 for it?

In Las Vegas, where I travel most often, slipping the clerk a $20 (or even a $10, depending upon the hotel) will usually net you a slight upgrade—maybe a corner room or one with a view of The Strip if you contort your body at just the right angle.

In other cities, such as New York or Philly, I’ve complained about my room maybe four out of 10 times and yes, I am always as pleasant as I can muster. At some point, you just know when a front desk clerk has stuck you in a dank room with a view of the parking garage wall just because he couldn’t be bothered to type a few extra keystrokes but, frankly, as annoyng as that is, I realize that being surly isn’t going to get me anywhere.

Recently, a friend and I visited Philly and stayed at the downtown Marriott Courtyard. The woman at the front desk was curt and distracted, and when we schlepped upstairs to find our room next to the elevator, the size of my laundry room and, yes, with a view of the parking garage wall, I immediately called downstairs to ask if there might be something else available. How interesting that this new person on the phone apologized for putting us in such sub-par accomodations and within minutes, we were relocated to a room twice the size with a view of Philly’s gorgeous City Hall building.

Hey, if you don’t ask, you’ll never know. Besides, you’re paying for it, so why not try to get the best for your dollar?

Check out this great New York Times story for some more tips:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/31/travel/31heads.html?ref=travel

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Posted in • Lifestyle




“Entourage”: The boys are back in town…eventually
Melissa Ruggieri
September 05, 2008 3:08 AM

Last we saw the “Entourage” boys, they were weathering the scathing reaction to Vincent Chase’s pet project, “Medellin,” at the Cannes Film Festival.
What could be worse than a booing audience?


An even more vicious dissection of the film by Richard Roeper, who eviscerates the movie on his TV show (which now no longer exists – but who knew that when this was filmed?) by saying it’s “overacted, under-directed…and a good bet for the top 10 worst of the year.”

Season five of “Entourage” (Sunday, 10 p.m. on HBO) begins with its usual caustic tone – this time, it’s the mean critics who know nothing…except when a movie that went straight to video is, indeed, a piece of garbage.

But Vince’s plummet from Aqua Man to Nowhere Man turns out to be exactly the kind of emotional curveball the show needed. So much of last season suffered from the gang’s complacent pomposity, and by humbling Vince and, by default, eager manager Eric, it stimulates a hunger in these guys that they had lost when success seemed so easy.

While E mopes and Johnny Drama ties himself to his laptop Web cam to stay in constant co-dependent contact with the French girl (Jacqueline) we think he hooked up with in Cannes (who can remember?), Vince is distracting himself from his first failure in the only way he knows how – by scoring chicks. Lots of them. On a remote Mexican island where he can look like Chewbacca in cutoffs and drink the days away with Turtle and the bevy of half-dressed women who probably couldn’t even spell “Medellin.”

Some things never change – and in the case of Ari Gold, that’s a wonderful, wonderful thing.

As usual, Ari, in his constant blur of spastic motion, is obnoxious, belligerent and hilariously abusive with his verbal torpedoes. Yeah, his eye is only on the final box office tallies, but, in his own oily way, he cares about Vince, and his first mission – with E – is to bring the boy back to land.

Vince, initially, is reluctant, choosing instead to tip back another bottle of tequila. But a tease from a major director for a major part in a major movie lures him back – and gets him to shave that awful face rug.

These spoiled guys aren’t used to living in, as Ari yells, “this post-‘Medellin’ world,’ and Vince quickly learns that having the football yanked away at the last second is something that will probably happen frequently.


By episode two, a chastened Vinny turns out to be quite an appealing one. When Ari bluntly tells him that he’s a great movie star, rather than a great actor, it’s a fine moment of, well, acting, from Adrian Grenier, whose wounded puppy reaction turns to I’ll-show-‘em’all defiance in a matter of seconds.

Now, Vince’s ambition is ignited, and even though he’s “in movie jail” – a Ralph Macchio whose career is on ice after one misstep – he’s at least realized that he has to make an effort to redeem himself.

So much of the fun of “Entourage” is its mimicking of Hollywood and in that regard, it’s as sharp as the first three seasons. Johnny’s dopey machismo is demonstrated with his usual bluster (his breakdown after not being able to reach Frenchie on the Web cam is especially amusing), and Turtle’s New-York-for-evuh loyalty to his crew reminds us of the steely bond among this quartet.

The show is also up to its usual standards on the cameo end, with show creator Mark Wahlberg making an appearance in the second episode, along with Tony Bennett playing himself, and Giovanni Ribisi and Lukas Haas as a couple of hick wannabe screenwriters whom E wants to represent.

With Fran Drescher, Kevin Pollack and Jeffrey Tambor scheduled to appear during this 12-episode run, this season is already superior to the last one.

Just keep giving us lots of Ari.

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Posted in • EntertainmentTelevision




Britney’s back for the VMAs
Melissa Ruggieri
September 04, 2008 6:30 PM

Well, at least she’s smart enough to refrain from performing—or so we think.

Britney Spears will open Sunday’s 25th annual MTV Video Music Awards, and producers say it will be something “fun and exciting,” which is how we know it won’t be a performance.

If you have a TV set, surely you remember last year’s VMA debacle, <<< which was billed as Britney’s big comeback, but turned into a sad, embarrassing train wreck of horrible lip-synching and stilted dancing.

“MTV has long played an important role in my career,” she said in a statement. “How can I not be there to kick off their 25th VMAs? I’m excited to open the entire show, to say hi to my fans and to be nominated.”

Britney is up for three awards for her single, “Piece of Me”—Best Female Video, Best Pop Video and Video of the Year.

The show airs at 9 p.m. Sunday on MTV. For more griping from me about what the show has turned into, click here: http://www.inrich.com/cva/ric/entertainment/music.apx.-content-articles-RTD-2008-09-04-0029.html

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“Prison Break” returns—and it’s good!
Melissa Ruggieri
September 01, 2008 3:00 AM

Somewhere around the fourth ridiculous death match in that dirt yard of the Panamanian jail, I gave up on “Prison Break” last season.

Among the endless sweating, a convoluted plot line that made the first two seasons look sensible and Sara’s head in a box (ahem), it became too laborious to follow.

Besides, I had “The Big Bang Theory” and “The New Adventures of Old Christine” tapped for TiVo on Monday nights.

But, having seen tonight’s two-hour season four premiere of Fox’s “Prison Break,” I’ve gotta say…they’ve hooked me,

The Sona prison is history (burned to the ground by the derelicts running the joint), so our tortured hero, Michael Scofield, is finally roaming around like a real person, first in L.A., then Chicago (which is still really L.A.).

Michael (Wentworth Miller) looks older, tired, beefier – and why wouldn’t he after living in that slum of a prison? No way anyone got any rest in that place. Plus, the evil Company, the mysterious group who kidnapped Linc’s son, LJ, has supposedly beheaded his beloved Sara Tandcredi, so Michael is now fueled solely by revenge.

Oh, let’s just get this out of the way, since it really isn’t a spoiler for anyone with a computer or access to a magazine or eyes to see the picture next to this review: The head in the box last season? Not Sara. Linc’s excuse for incorrectly informing his brother that the love of his life was a headless corpse (“Uhhhh….it was dark in the room and I didn’t want to get grossed out and touch the head,” is basically how it goes) is laughable and almost Bobby Ewing quality.

But, whatever. Sarah Wayne Callies, the actress who plays Sara, apparently made nice with the producers over her contract (the reason she was written out of the show last year) and Michael can make goo goo eyes at her again. Except, strangely, when the two are finally reunited, there isn’t much of an emotional payoff.

Perhaps you’ve also heard that some major/recurring characters get whacked in these return episodes. Tis true.

One is disposed of so quickly, it actually is briefly shocking, while the other two meet the kind of demise we’re better off not knowing details about. Let’s just say that Alex Mahone (William Fichtner) has new reasons to pop pills – and understandably so.

The source of the killings is The Company’s creepy/quiet henchman, Wyatt, who is determined to find Michael, Linc and Sara; the official “story” is that they’ve been sent to a Supermax prison, but c’mon, like these icy murderers are going to fall for that? Michael even endures the excruciating removal of his full body tattoo (and without a sedative—he’s such a man!) to make himself less conspicuous. Again, as if that makes hiding from People Who Know Everything any easier?

It appears that the thrust of this season will focus on Michael, Linc, Alex and, believe it or not, the ever-grubby Bellick, working with Homeland Security (the always welcome Michael Rappaport joins the cast as a government agent who is an ally for the gang) to bring down The Company.

Also in the mix, of course, is T-Bag, who is separated from the group, but in possession of an item that is crucial to Michael’s crew. A scene with one of TV’s oiliest, yet somehow likeable creeps, as he sits sucking on sunflower seeds is grotesque in so many ways. But the kicker of the night is when T-Bag is asked, “What? You eat some bad Mexican?”

You’ll never look at a taco the same way again.

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Posted in • EntertainmentTelevision




LL—later than you might think
Melissa Ruggieri
August 28, 2008 7:51 PM

If you’re hitting Saturday’s LL Cool J concert at Brown’s Island, don’t expect the big man to show up before sundown.

Though gates open at 5 p.m. – and a DJ is scheduled to do DJ things until 5:30 p.m. – LL isn’t expected on stage until around 9 p.m.

In the ensuing three and a half hours, you’ll be treated to an array of local singers, comedians and a dance talent contest.

Tickets for the event are still available through Ticketmaster for $25.

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Phelps and Lil Wayne do SNL…will it run late?
Melissa Ruggieri
August 27, 2008 7:48 PM


Will it start late or run late? That’s what I’m wondering with the news that this season’s “Saturday Night Live” premiere will star Olympic god Michael Phelps as host and the I-do-things-on-my-own-time Lil Wayne.

The pairing makes sense, as Phelps often spoke of his affinity for the frequently arrested, never on time, mega-selling rapper. Apparently, Wayne’s ‘I’m Me” fired up Phelps before his races.

The Sept. 13 show will be the first of four live “SNL”’s in a row, and the show will air seven new episodes prior to the presidential election. Given Fred Armisen’s tepid impersonation of Barack Obama, is anyone really excited about this?

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Posted in • EntertainmentTelevision




Local Springsteen pic in the news
Melissa Ruggieri
August 27, 2008 2:46 PM

Seems someone in the area knew the right channels to send to at MSNBC.com’s entertainment site. Check out this great pic of Bruce Springsteen from his concert last week at the Richmond Coliseum:

("The Week in Celebrity Sightings”—number 20 in the slide show).

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/?q=celebrity+sightings&submit=Search&id=11881780&FORM=AE&os=0&gs=1&p=1&adunitid=939&propertyid=3501

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Posted in • EntertainmentMusic




Elliott Yamin under the tree
Melissa Ruggieri
August 26, 2008 12:40 AM

Camp Elliott Yamin has confirmed that the “My Kind of Holiday” CD you might have seen advertised is indeed legitimate.

While the 10-track CD listed here (among other places)—http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=10297985—contains several songs found on last season’s holiday album released exclusively through Target, Elliott’s management says there will be some new tunes as well (“Christmas Without Carol,” perhaps?).

The disc is slated for an Oct. 7 release.

The E-man is also still working on his sophomore CD in between traveling – he’s currently performing in Japan through the end of the month.

Photo: Evan Agostini, Getty Images

BTW, Elliott’s “American Idol” pal, Ace Young, has been tapped for the role of Kenickie in “Grease” on Broadway. Ace will join the production at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre Sept. 9, where he’ll hand jive alongside another “Idol” alum – Taylor Hicks, who has been playing Teen Angel since June.

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Bruce Springsteen: Thanks for the memories, part deux
Melissa Ruggieri
August 14, 2008 6:00 AM

A couple of weeks ago, we put out a call for readers to share with us their favorite Bruce Springsteen memories. Within hours, I had received close to a dozen, and emails were still trickling in as of Wednesday afternoon. So thank you, Bruce fans, for your passion and your willingness to reveal how the rocker and his music have affected your lives.

We only had room for a handful of responses in Thursday’s Weekend section, so if they didn’t make it to print, no worries - you can read them here, completely intact. Thanks again for your participation—and hopefully Monday’s show at the Richmond Coliseum will only add to your memory files.

Also, all photos used here are taken from the book “For You,” a collection of Springsteen photos and stories as provided by fans. You can read more about it in Thursday’s Weekend section.

Just a few memories to share with you regarding Mr. Springsteen who I have loved since 1980 when my sister’s boyfriend in high school popped in his tape in the car (“The River”)...and I was hooked!

I have seen him four times in concert, my favorite being the “Tunnel of Love” tour in D.C. He had a full brass band behind him that was amazing. This is also the tour he was very obviously flirting with Patti Scialfa and brought her to front center stage quite a bit during the show. (Of course his divorce from Julianne Phillips was announced shortly after) .¤.¤. .

My best memory has to be when he was performing in D.C. in the past 10 years (I apologize, I forgot the date), but I was in the nose-bleed section and a friend of mine was also there, but she was down by the stage working with a group who had stage side seats.

It turned out she had a few empty seats where she was and came and found me in the crowd and escorted me to one of these empty seats. I almost could have reached out and touched him.

I was sitting right next to the VIP section and could look over and see Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt and some other famous faces enjoying the show. To see Bruce that close was a memory I’ll never forget.

— Jane Atkisson

I saw Springsteen and the E Street Band in Los Angeles in 1980. He had Flo and Eddie from The Turtles sing background vocals on “Hungry Heart.” Very cool.

At one point in the concert he sat down on the edge of the stage with his guitar and told about growing up in New Jersey. He said his father, who didn’t have much education, went from factory job to factory job, but he always made sure that the rent was paid, there was food on the table and clothes on their backs.

And then Bruce said, “When your parents go to work every day, and they hate it, they do it because they hope that you won’t have to.” It was a very poignant moment. Bruce’s version of the American Dream. And then he sang “The River.” Perfect.

— Dan Jobe

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Posted in • EntertainmentMusic




Bret Michaels invites thousands to Sharky’s
Melissa Ruggieri
August 13, 2008 10:34 PM

At the end of Poison’s Wednesday night Innsbrook concert, Bret Michaels told the very sold-out crowd that he was sorry it took so long for the band to play a show in Richmond, and then ended with something along the lines of: “I’m gonna be hanging out at an after-show party at Sharky’s, which they tell me is real close to here. I think tickets are almost sold out, but c’mon down anyway and we’ll party in the streets!”

That sound you heard was not, in fact, the excited whoops of 6,500 people, but the wailing of every security guard who has ever had to police a concert or, worse, an after party.

Last week, it was announced that Michaels would hold an after party at Sharky’s in Innsbrook for $50 a person, limited to 150 people.

That’s manageable.

Inviting a slew of fans—many of them having pounded a few by this point—to hang out even without a ticket is just nuts!

For the heck of it, after filing my review, I drove by Sharky’s to see what kind of crowd showed up.

Michaels’ tour bus was parked in front of Mama Cucina, with a couple of police officers directing traffic around it. The parking lot was an overflowing zoo, with people parked along the curbs, random packs of girls wandering in front of moving vehicles...that kind of thing.

In front of Sharky’s, about 100 or so fans crowded the sidewalk and entrance to the bar/club, whose door was being guarded by a fairly intimidating-looking cop.

Ah well. Michaels may have inadvertently created a headache for the organizers of this thing, but I’m sure the folks at Capital Ale House and the new Beach House Bar & Grill were thrilled with the over-spillage.

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