What the Americans can learn from UK Law & Order {TV}

The TV industry is a funny one. The UK version of Law & Order is obviously a remake of the American format which seems to have franchises around different US cities. So ITV bought the format rights, remade it and sold the series to BBC America who are showing back to the Americans? Well at least they’re learning things they never thought they’d want to know. Hit play on the video for almost 3 minutes of giggles.

An Early Peak into A/W 2011 – Part One – It's all Colour…

Ok, so it’s January 2011, the sun is still a counterpart to our day to day routines,  however, one thing that never stops, is FASHION!

Let’s take a little peak into this A/W trends – starting with colour. We all know Burberry has shown us the gateway to mulling rouges, purples and reds. This year is going to be a runway for diverse colours, and let’s face it, no matter what the season, fashion is a playground when it comes to experimenting with colour.

Lets break this down into themes – as this year will be prompting us with a heavy mix and match of moods in colour.

Olive and Gold – The Avante Garde of rich colour beauty. An array of strong, striking bronzes, symbolising the brash fire of a woman! These colours will play happy to patterns in tweed and heavy layed cottons and knits.

Let’s shift to a flurry of Blues and Greys – think Urban meets metropolitan. Minimalist silvers and heavier metallic colours, symbolising culture and diversity. Think striking navys – baby blues, of course conceptualised with the universal pallete noir.

The richness of darker colours – Plums, Auburns, especially on heavily layered georgettes and chiffons. Deep violets on silk yarns – edgy and all about the Winter.

Now let’s get a little girly – Vibrant Pinks on scarves, knits in a pallette of lighter colours, light coloured trench coats, and woollen enthused mittens and gloves – very girl-next-door! Also, rich pinks in the Autumn will be applied to sheer layers and as an extra to ruffled blouses and details on skirts. So delicately Autumn.

Greens – A colour we all connotate with nature, green will be a big colour this Autumn – Mustard and Apple greens. Think rich and natural – energising colours.  A labyrinth of scarves and jumpers – keeping the faith of the 60’s look.

Look at Andrew Garfield in his Spider Man Costume {Film}

Sony’s released this picture of Andrew Garfield as Spider Man and we think he looks like he’s been saving marine animals from a BP oil spill.

There’s also a Facebook page for the Spider Man 4 that you can join too.

So what do you guys think?

We love: Avril Lavigne's 'What The Hell'

Avril Lavigne’s lastest nugget of angsty delight hit iTunes on Monday, and has already soared past Bruno Mars and Katy Perry to nab the No.2  spot behind Ms Spears’ ‘Hold It Against Me’. It’s the first single from her fourth studio album ‘Goodbye Lullaby’ (due March 8), and although we’re not quite hearing the promised evidence of a more mature Avril (it certainly doesn’t sound like the offering of a recent divorcée), it is undeniably, arrestingly catchy.

Despite her absence from the charts we’ve grown fonder of Avril over the last year or so. Mainly because we’re highly impressionable tweens at heart, and so when ‘Keep Holding On’ featured in Season One of Glee and then Cher Lloyd sang the crap out of ‘Girlfriend’ on X-Factor we were reminded of her in the most favourable light possible. And irritating though it can be when a woman in her mid twenties looks and sings like a 14-year-old (‘yeah’ & ‘woah’ are to Avril what ‘uh’ is to Britney), she does come up trumps when it comes to peppy, infectious girlypunk. You can try to resist, we say don’t bother.

Why we love What The Hell:

1. The lyrics. They’re just so darn sympathetic. Who among us hasn’t at times needed to “be a little crazy” and wanted nothing more than to “mess around”?

2. The barest, faintest, flicker of pain: “You can’t save me”, “You never call or listen to me anyway”. We’re imagining Avril in a Skins-type scenario, starved of affection from the one she truly loves, and therefore doing the natural thing, ie: put it recklessly about. “Yeah, I am messing with your head, When I’m messing with you in bed”- Effy anyone?

3. The tune. It’s VERY similar to Girlfriend. But we loved Girlfriend as well, so that’s fine.

4. The pure shamelessness of a 26 year old refusing to grow up . Obstinate, foolhardy party-pop, let it wash over you…

Fall in love:

Kenny Dalglish – a hero’s return, and it’s not just sentiments running high.

By Yue Ting Cheng.

Second comings don’t always work out. Not least in football.

Howard Kendall, Everton’s greatest manager, who won the league twice, was a pale imitator in his second and third spells, while Kevin Keegan’s return to Newcastle was short-lived.

But the curious reappointment of Kenny Dalglish as Liverpool manager – the Reds’ and Scotland’s greatest all-time player – brought an unusual warm feeling to the heart.

Since last year,  I thought that, paradoxically, Liverpool won’t be able to move on until they bring back the past – that Rafa Benitez should be replaced by the club’s favourite son – Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish!

His reappointment brought back childhood memories. It was an era just before the Premier League, pay-per-view, Sky Sports and massive, massive salaries. I read in an old economics book that John Barnes, Footballer of the Year in 1988 and 1990, was paid £100,000… a year! Imagine that. Nowadays, some players earn that in a week.

It was an era before Sir Alex Ferguson and Manchester United were winning everything in sight, with occasionally Arsenal and Chelsea upsetting them – and for one time only – Blackburn Rovers, managed by, guess who? Dalglish.

Now I’ll say that I am no Liverpool supporter. Yes, the team of the 1980s – particularly the 1987-88 team featuring John Barnes, Peter Beardsley, John Aldridge, Ronnie Whelan, Alan Hansen, Steve Nicol and Bruce Grobbelaar  – remains one of the finest British teams of all time. But I have always supported the two teams of my roots, Norwich and Watford.

But Kenny Dalglish represents something unusual in that he is a symbol of real change. Both in the sense that he was Liverpool’s first player-manager, and following his shock resignation to an entire nation in 1991, marking the end of the Liverpool dynasty.

Then the Premier League happened. Fellow Scotsman and former team captain, Graeme Souness’ reign was the start of a downward spiral heralding an era of underachievement starting in 1991 and lasting till about… now.

Twenty years is a long time in any part of life, especially in football. One could only imagine Dalglish’s burning desire. The feeling that he had unfinished business at the club he should have made dominate English football for another two decades.

In 1991, Sir Alex Ferguson had yet to win a league title. In 2011, with Liverpool and Manchester United jointly holding 18 league titles, Ferguson is now close to bringing Manchester United a record 19th, finally eclipsing the Anfield outfit.  History comes round in circles, it seems.

People are saying that Dalglish has been out of the game for too long or his methods are outdated. Cynics add that he is behind the times, and that he’s not managed a club for ten years – since picking up the pieces following John Barnes’ disastrous spell at Celtic, and a turbulent spell at Newcastle, where he was sacked after finishing 2nd in the Premier league in 1996-7 and 13th the following season.

But his record speaks for itself. Four league titles as manager at two different clubs – a feat achieved by only two other men, the legendary Brian Clough and Herbert Chapman – and countless more as a player, including several European Cups. And Liverpool fans know his passion for the club, inside and out. His reappointment has already galvanised the Reds and the city.  He probably won’t cause miracles. He may be lucky to get the team to finish in the top six this season, but then, who would expect him to? When you clear up a bloody mess, it takes time to get the kitchen clean!

Simply, Dalglish is the spiritual king of Liverpool FC, and a link between past, present, and possible future. Remember, he’s younger than Roy Hodgson – his sorrowful predecessor by four years, younger than his arch-nemesis Alex Ferguson by ten, and even Arsenal’s Arsene Wenger is older by two years.

Who knows how much he’ll be able to achieve? But for me, this story is not about Liverpool, Kenny Dalglish or even football itself, but people feeling optimism when they think they’re down and out. And suddenly a spark arrives.

I don’t know if it has anything to do with him as a man. He’s a very earthy Glaswegian (detractors would say dour and often verbally cryptic!), but although he hardly brims with bright charisma, he has a real straightforward charm and wit about him which more pretentious people lack. But I can sense he really means something to the people who understand him as a man and as a footballing legend.

At the start of last year, I watched an old Scottish television documentary of his life (from a VHS video I’ve had for years) from 1986, about his life until that point. What I was struck by, was not just the documentary style – which was very thoughtful and partly shot on film, giving it an artistic quality – but the minimalism of how they portrayed him, his frankness, and the constant look of worry on his face!

He was still a player in 1986 at 35 years old,  but almost completely free from the razzmatazz and hype you see surrounding players of today like your Ronaldos, Messis and Beckhams. There’s a poignant moment in the film when he walks on the beach with his wife Marina and their kids. He is talking about his family and how much they matter to him. It’s very hard to imagine a modern day footballer in such a scene at all.

So here’s to you King Kenny, and your continued success!

We love: Britney's 'Hold It Against Me'

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Britney Spears dropped her new single Hold It Against Me just before midnight on 11/1/11 to an overwhelmingly positive response from the media and general public.

Anticipation had built to a deafening clamour following the leak of a demo, prompting Britney to release a few hours ahead of schedule, tweeting: “Don’t #HOLDITAGAINSTME for coming out early. I couldn’t wait any longer. Hope you don’t mind….. – Britney”

The addictive track shot to the top of the iTunes charts within 24 hours of its release, and has been a constant request on the most influential US radio stations since, breaking records for first day spins according to her label and top industry analyst Kevin McCabe. Twitter and YouTube have been flooded with exuberant praise for the single, which was produced by pop masters Dr. Luke and Max Martin. Hold It Against Me is the first single from Britney’s new album, tipped by Jersey Shore star DJ Pauly D as an ‘amazing’ sure-fire hit, packed with ‘incredible’ tracks.

Why we love Hold It Against Me:

1. The name. Genius.

2. Up tempo. So necessary to get through these grey months.

3. The hint of dub-step, thanks to which we feel almost credible recommending it. Just tune out for the cringalicious: “Cause you feel like paradise… and I need a vacation tonight”

4. An unprecedented quota of Britney noises. Practically every other word ends in ‘uh’, and listen out for what happens when ‘hazy’ meets 12 + sound technicians.

5. The line ‘pop it like a hood’- so many terrible moves/puns will surely occur thanks to this phrase.

6. It is irresistibly danceable, so resign yourself – those committed to going out regularly may as well choreograph something.

Fall in love:

Manga Dreams at the Hamilton Gallery. {Art}

MANGA DREAMS

An exhibition of prints by fine art photographers Anderson & Low

www.andersonandlow.com

27 January – 5 March 2011

Hamiltons Gallery

13 Carlos Place

London

W1K 2EU, UK

Focusing on the dynamic between subject and photographer, Manga Dreams explores a visual hybrid of photography, graphics, digital painting and calligraphy with numerous layers of interpretations. Subjects tailor their look to that of manga, including extremely styled hair and elaborate costume, while performing for the camera.

Manga, stemming originally from Asia, means ‘cartoon’ and within the context of this exhibition connects street youth and visual cyberculture with contemporary art. The influence of street culture is well recognised in modern art – take Lichtenstein and Warhol for example. Manga Dreams can be seen as a continuation of this genre, drawing on an Eastern paradigm and applying it to portraiture.

Prints are for sale. Please contact Christina Richardson at Hamiltons for more information christina@hamiltonsgallery.com / 020 7499 9494

Spotted! Kate Middleton at The Ebury with bridal mags. {Celebrity}

Kate Middleton has become a regular customer at stylish Chelsea Brasserie, The Ebury, where she was recently spotted poring over a stack of magazines, which looked suspiciously like bridal ones. The restaurant is located a stone’s throw from where the procession will be leaving Buckingham Palace, so is the perfect setting for viewing the Royal nuptials.