Celebrities Turn Out For Turbo Screening

Celebrities and their children headed down to the Vue West End in Leicester Square on Sunday 6th October 2013 to watch Turbo, the 3D computer-animated comedy sports film. They all seemed to enjoy the film.

Cinema-goersincluded Sean Bean, Kate Garraway, Linford Christie, Jade Parfitt,, Nicola Mclean and Harry Hickles.

DSC_6274 (2)

Linford Chistie

Linford Chistie

Sean Bean

Sean Bean

 Jade Parfitt

Jade Parfitt

 Kate Garraway

Kate Garraway

 

 

London’s First Beer Trolley Has Arrived At Honky Tonk

cocktail, cocktails, where to go,London’s first beer trolley has arrived! Diners at both Honky Tonk Chelsea and their brand new venture Honky Tonk Clapham, will be able to try and taste the most delicious and refreshing beers on the market, all from the comfort of their seats. The trolley will be wheeled around the restaurant by a specially trained beer sommelier allowing you to pick your beer of choice. There will be a large selection of everything from the extra malty to the light and fruity, so that all needs are catered for. So whether you’re a regular beer drinker or more used to ordering fruity cocktails there will be something for everyone.

Honky Tonk is the brainchild of Mark Cutler, one of the founders of Notting Hill institution, supperclub London and looks set to become West London’s destination diner of choice. supperclub London is well loved for its innovative performances and creativity and Mark has developed this in Honky Tonk too. There will be regular live music and entertainment, with a particular emphasis on a variation of the blues, jazz and rockabilly played over a hundred years ago when the first honky tonks sprung up in the Southern and Southwestern United States.

This autumn a little slice of the big apple has also arrived in Clapham in the form of a second Honky Tonk. Following on from the success of Honky Tonk Chelsea, the venue offers an American-inspired restaurant, late night bar and live performances.

Honky Tonk Chelsea
6 Hollywood Road,
London
SW10 9HY
Tel: 0207 351 1588
W: www.honkytonklondon.com/

Opening Times: Tues- Sat, 6pm-12.30am

Honky Tonk Clapham
16A Clapham South Side
London
SW4 7AB
Tel: 020 7627 6257

Opening Times: Monday-Wednesday 5 pm to 12 pm, Thurs 5pm -1am,
Friday 5pm-1.30 am, Sat 12pm- 2am, Sunday12pm-11.30pm

AudaCity of Fashion launches coffee mornings offering free crowd funding advice

Need money for your fashion business?

Then you need to book in to  “AudaCity Coffee Mornings” for a one-to-one free consultation to discuss how crowdfunding could be the solution to your funding issues

AudaCity of Fashion offers a revolutionary approach to the support of fashion creativity in London. As a reward based crowdfunding platform dedicated to fashion, AudaCity of Fashion allows designers to pre-sell their products and undertake market research. It fosters an early collaboration with the audience, who pledge and receive rewards in return of their contributions.

AudaCity of Fashion, Free fashion business advice

As this is a new concept to most young fashion brands, AudaCity of Fashion has launched a weekly coffee morning when fashion creative can pop in for a free one-to-one consultation to discuss how crowd funding could help their business. The sessions are available every Tuesday morning starting on October 1st from 10am – 1pm at Felicities Showroom, Shoreditch. To book an appointment call Josie on 0207 377 6030.

 

AudaCity of Fashion opens the door to creative funding. It allows fashion ideas, which do not fit the criteria required byconventional financiers to break through, get access to the market, and gain financial support from truly interested early supporters.

 

Open to everyone connected within the fashion industry including designers, photographers, illustrators, magazines, and bloggers, AudaCity of Fashion will engage with people to bring the energy, enthusiasm and resources to accomplish a positive change and build sustainable brands for the future.

 

AudaCity of Fashion which launched in July has already had two successful projects and has garnered support from key industry figures who will act as curators, catalysts and experts and be the visionary individuals willing to support the growth of inspirational fashion businesses.   Gemma Ebelis, Head of PR, British Fashion Council commented: “This exciting opportunity will enable designers to engage directly with their customers; a welcomed development in terms of communicating key messaging surrounding events or bespoke product.This successful technology is a move away from traditional funding models and has been instrumental in raising money within other industries. This September, we look forward to incorporating it into the UK’s fashion arena with activity planned for London Fashion Week”.

www.audacityoffashion.com   

 

How To Take A Good Selfie

Selfies are hugely popular, but surprisingly hard to do. Taking your own picture can take hours to perfect and can result in arm strain and dropped phones. Selfies on mobile phones are just ripe for disaster, if only you could have a self timer like on a real camera…well, of course you can. This is 2013, anything’s possible. And it costs under a fiver. Impressed? So were we. Thank us later.

How to take the perfect selfie

Fed up of trying to take selfies on your mobile phone? Or maybe you struggle to take pictures of you and your mates on a night out? You need the Snap remote, the simple remote links to a free downable app, and all you have to do is position the camera, step back and snap away.

The Snap remote costs just £4.95 from prezzybox.com

Fleetwood Mac Still A Hit Over 50 Years On

Fleetwood_Mac_

Following their triumphant return to the live UK music scene viagogo has recorded a 268 per cent surge in overnight demand for Fleetwood Mac as fans search Everywhere to get their hands on tickets.

With Rumours rife that band member Christine McVie will also join the group on stage for two nights of the UK leg of the tour, it seems die-hard fans are desperate to get hold of last minute tickets to catch a rare glimpse of the full line-up in action.

Helen McCrory Wears David Morris Jewels at The 65th Emmy Awards

The winner of the best subtle bling look is the beautiful Helen McCrory. She was spotted wearing David Morris jewels at the 65th annual Emmy Awards in the US.

Helen is wearing fancy vivid yellow diamond earrings with white marquise-cut diamond surrounds (totalling 9.86cts) and butterfly and flower ring with fancy vivid yellow diamonds and white pear-shape diamonds (totalling 7.19cts)

Damien Lewis, Helen McCrory, Emmys, pictures

Who: Helen McCrory

What: David Morris yellow diamond earrings and ring.

Where: 65th annual Emmy Awards

When: 22nd September 2013

What do you think?

David Mitchell Interview

David Mitchell InterviewDavid Mitchell – Was It Something I Said? Coming soon to C4

Was It Something I Said? – what’s it all about?

It’s a comedy panel show about quotations. A quiz where people have to work out who said certain things or what certain people have said. So it’s about celebrities, historical figures, currents affairs and history. We’ve tried to make it jolly and irreverent and funny but also a bit informative and interesting. An amusing way of watching some comedians trying to solve a quiz about famous people and vaguely impart some interesting information about them at the same time.

 

And there is a Twitter element to the show too – how do you feel about Twitter?

Broadly speaking I’m against the internet. I don’t like it; I wish it wasn’t there. Nevertheless things change, the ice caps melt some changes are irreversible and the internet is definitely here to stay. Of all the aspects of the internet I’ve always found Twitter to be jollier, friendlier and more human than most. So, I quite like Twitter but I’m not of the internet generation. When I was a teenager and a student the internet didn’t really exist and I was fine with that and I feel when it comes to Twitter I’m very happy to sometimes chat, it’s a very useful way of telling people who are interested in stuff I do what I’m doing, but I don’t want to bare my soul.

People who grew up with the internet are much more open about their whole lives on Twitter or Facebook but I think we are in the early days of a learning process of how best to use it as an individual and I’m definitely erring on the side of caution and holding back as much of my privacy as I can.

I do think Twitter is quite useful when you’re not sure whether a news story is terrifying or not. Have a look at Twitter and see what the mood is. It is like taking the pulse of a whole civilisation. At the same time it can be fun, informative and inspiring yet it can be bullying and weird and reminds you crowds aren’t always wise.

Nevertheless I am 100% behind the interactivity of WISIS, you can play along to every question to every show, a world first apparently. What more harmless way of using the internet than allowing people to take part in a quotations based TV quiz…

 

Did you enjoy filming WISIS? and being the host?

I’d done a Big Fat Quiz of the Year with Richard Ayoade but had never done anything with Micky Flanagan and I like that over the course of the series the three of us got on well, interacted together and there was a nice chemistry between us. We had lots of great guests and tremendous people like Charles Dance, John Craven and Brian Blessed reading out the quotations so it was great fun to do. It was a little bit more nerve wracking than doing a series like Would I Lie To You for the fourth time, thinking I don’t know the ropes yet, haven’t figured out how it all works but still lots of fun and ultimately probably more satisfying. And particularly being the host is a very different role, chipping in some of the time but while managing the quiz and working out what to say to link the rounds. The great thing about being in the host’s chair is that you can make yourself look so knowledgeable.

But can be tricky, usually the panellists are people who are bright and want to talk and you need them to keep talking so you can’t slap them down hard because they might go quiet and then you’re stuck. So it is my policy generally to let them talk and drift…you never know in that kind of comic situation where a chat is going and some of the best material comes when things are allowed to run and breathe. We wanted it off the cuff and as organic and natural as possible so I tried not to be too school masterly about things. Fortunately I have no natural authority so very easy for me to do that.

 

You combine acting, writing and hosting seamlessly – how do you manage that?

I do like the range of work. They’re jobs I find satisfying in different ways. Going on a show as a panellist is the easiest fun in my job, you don’t have to think about it in advance. Whether hosting or writing or acting it takes a lot more preparation so in a sense it’s a lot more like work. But when you’ve written something that is performed and it gets laughs that is the most amazingly satisfying ‘I love it when a plan comes together’ sort of feeling.

I feel very lucky that my life involves all these different elements. I’ve recently been filming the comedy drama Ambassadors which is a very different process, long filming days, having to think about how a character would behave in situations I’ve never been in myself. I enjoy acting but I wouldn’t want to only do that, I’d also want to go along to a studio in the evening and make rude jokes. I would get bored doing any one thing exclusively. And of course the other thing is I don’t have to get too much work in any of them as I can build up a living across all four…”

 

Do you have a favourite moment from recording the show?

There are loads. I like the bits where we all get a bit silly and irreverent. I remember there was a quote from Catherine Zeta Jones about playing golf with her husband Michael Douglas. We essentially all started to imagine the scene of the two of them playing golf and that was very enjoyable and turned into a really fun bit of TV. It is moments like that, which for me, justify the existence of panel shows because no one would ever have written those words, it purely came out of that combination of people which proves panel shows can produce funny TV in a way you could never write into a sitcom or a sketch show and thereby justifies its place on screen. I think it is a great form of entertainment and we shouldn’t lose sight of that.

I hope people like WISIS? We want viewers to have a feeling of irreverence and warmth. Not a shouty, hostile environment but a chatty and interesting one.

 

Lastly are there any quotes you are particularly fond of?

One of my favourite quotes is attributed to Voltaire but people say it wasn’t actually him…either way it is a very wise thing – ‘I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it’.

I think that’s a very important idea especially for the internet. The idea too often at the moment is that people think those who say horrible things should be silenced rather than answered. I think we’d be a more healthy society if people used their freedom of speech to, as it were, reply to and rebuke people who say things they hate rather than use the law to silence them.

 

The Face Judge Caroline Winberg Wears Herve Leger

Who: Caroline Winberg

What: Herve Leger Anais dress

Where: THE FACE campaign

Caroline Winberg,THE FACE, , campaign wearing , ANAIS dress , HERVE LEGER. The Anais dress is exclusive,Herve Leger

The gorgeous Caroline Winberg can be seen in the much anticipated TV show THE FACE promotional campaign wearing the ANAIS dress from HERVE LEGER. It is a beautiful and stunning dress and we have been drooling over it at Frost. The Anais dress is exclusively available in the UK at the London Herve Leger store (020 7201 2590).