November 20 - December 3, 2014 | Vol. 24 Issue 20 | Always Free WHO RULES LA? USC / UCLA CLOCK IN TO FOOTBALL PREVIEW 8 THINGS TO DO DURING THANKSGIVING BREAK PLUS: INTERN FASHION TIPS FROM MINDY KALING! ©2014 CAMPUS CIRCLE • (323) 939-8477 • 5042 WILSHIRE BLVD., #600 LOS ANGELES, CA 90036 • WWW.CAMPUSCIRCLE.COM TABLE OF CONTENTS November 20 - December 3, 2014 Vol. 24 Issue 20 WHAT’SINSIDE Editor-in-Chief Sydney Champion editor.chief@campuscircle.net Art Director 8 16 Sean Michael Beyer NEWS Film Editor film.editor@campuscircle.net 04 The Latest from L.A. and Beyond 05 How to Celebrate Thanksgiving in L.A. Music Editor music.editor@campuscircle.net COLLEGE CENTRAL Calendar Editor Frederick Mintchell calendar.editor@campuscircle.net 06 Calif.’s College Debt Experiences Decline 06 Chinese Students Opt for Editorial Interns Ryan Bouziane Contributing Writers Jacob Gaitan Grad Programs at Home SPORTS REAL 911 Calls sure to make you... Laugh Your Arse Off! Truth is by far funnier than fiction, and this collection of real calls to law enforcement in Hometown Police Blotter is exactly that. Whether you give it a gander atop the throne, or share it with friends, it’s sure to bring a smile to everyone’s face and then some. Available in Paperback, Hard Cover and ePub. www.HometownPoliceBlotter.com 07 UCLA, USC Football Game Preview Angela Matano MUSIC ADVERTISING Sean Bello sean.bello@campuscircle.net 08 To Stream or Not to Stream… SChooL oF DEntIStRy Center for Esthetic Dentistry 09 Album Review: One Direction’s Four 13 Q&A: What Does Soko Joy Calisoff joy.calisoff@campuscircle.net Campus Circle newspaper is Have in Store? FILM published 24 times a year and is 14 Holiday Movie Guide: 2014 Edition available free at 35 schools and 16 Cover Story: An In-Depth Look into over 400 retail locations throughout Los Angeles. Circulation: 20,000. Horrible Bosses 2 Readership: 90,000. PUBLISHED BY CAMPUS CIRCLE, INC. 5042 Wilshire Blvd., PMB 600 Los Angeles, CA 90036 FASHION 17 Intern Outfits from Mindy Kaling’s Instagram (323) 939-8477 campusci@campuscircle.net campuscircle.com BEAUTY 18 Westside Spas Offer Relaxation, ©2014 Campus Circle, Inc. Glamour All rights reserved. Left Photo: (Before) Existing tooth-colored fillings and porcelain crown Right Photo: (After) IPS e.max all-ceramic crowns and veneers Esthetic Restorations All procedures are performed by Post-graduate Dentists and supervised by Clinical Faculty of the Center for Esthetic Dentistry call (310)825-4736 for an appointment VENEERS AT A DISCOUNTED RATE - CALL FOR DETAILS UCLA School of Dentistry, Westwood Campus COVER PHOTO COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES AND NEW LINE CINEMA www.CampusCircle.com CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 3 NEWS VIEWS The Latest from L.A. and Beyond BY CAMPUS CIRCLE STAFF UBER TO OFFER FREE RIDES TO GROVE, AMERICANA DURING HOLIDAY SEASON While some of you may still be recovering from Halloween, planning your Thanksgiving or preparing for finals, it’s time to start thinking about your holiday shopping. Anyone who has lived in Los Angeles during the holiday season knows that instead of turning into a winter wonderland, L.A. becomes one giant inferno of bad driving, no parking spots and huge crowds, especially at the famous Grove and Americana shopping centers. The motto: The earlier you get your holiday shopping done, the better. But if you’re a car-less college student, getting to these tourist-heaving destinations during the holidays is a complicated mission. This year, Uber is partnering with Caruso Affiliated (which owns The Grove and The Americana) to help you out with your holiday shopping. Starting from Black Friday, Nov. 28 and running until Christmas Eve, Dec. 24, Uber will be offering free rides to people going to The Grove or The Americana. Oh, but here’s the catch: You have to spend $450 or more at the properties’ stores. If you spend that much, you’ll get a free roundtrip ride. Obviously, if you’re not planning on spending that much money, this offer is useless to you. But if you have pricier items on your shopping list, you might want to download the app and take advantage of this service. REPORT: FINANCIAL AID DOESN’T COVER LOW-INCOME STUDENTS’ RISING COLLEGE COSTS In California, low-income students are having a tough time paying for college. According to a report by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California, financial aid is unable to cover the rising college costs. “While total financial assistance available through federal grants, Cal Grants, institutional aid, and private scholarships has increased,” states the report, “the actual cost of attending community college or the California State University has also increased for low-income students—those whose family income is $30,000 or less.” LARGE PIZZA FOR A MEDIUM PRICE ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES/MC NEWS Shoppers flood the streets at The Grove in Los Angeles. As reported by the Los Angeles Daily News, low-income students at UC schools are taking out a huge chunk of their income compared to others to pay for college, and many have to resort to taking out loans at a higher rate. The report recommends that California public colleges should increase the size of grants to keep up with inflation, and colleges should keep actual costs below a certain amount for grant recipients. USC, UCLA MAKE BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK’S BEST MBA SCHOOLS LISTS Thinking about going to grad school to get your MBA? Then you need to check out Bloomberg Businessweek’s “Best Business Schools 2014.” For the 14th time, Bloomberg Businessweek ranked the country’s full-time MBA programs. And for the first time ever, Harvard has been knocked out of the top five. The Harvard Business School comes in at No. 8, behind Yale University and Northwestern University. At the top spot is Duke University, followed by University of Pennsylvania, University of Chicago, Stanford University and Columbia University. UCLA Anderson School of Management rose from its 2012 ranking at No. 16 to No. 11. USC also jumped in the ranks, from No. 28 two years ago to No. 21 in 2014. You know you want to… Write for Campus Circle! Campus Circle is looking for entertainment Culver City (323) 296-1543 • Granada Hills (818) 831-1245 • Huntington Beach (714) 964-5926 Koreatown (213) 386-6884 • Lawndale (310) 214-8704 • North Hollywood (818) 766-7184 Pacoima (818) 890-5515 • Palmdale (661) 947-4545 • Pasadena (626) 577-1723 Saugus (661) 259-3895 • Simi Valley (805) 522-2586 • Wilshire/Highland (323) 939-7661 Expires 12/31/14 freelance writers, photographers and interns to cover music, film, fashion, dining and more in Los Angeles. Get access to L.A.’s entertainment scene, LARGE PIZZA FOR A MEDIUM PRICE attend free movies and concerts, and interview your favorite celebs! Culver City (323) 296-1543 • Granada Hills (818) 831-1245 • Huntington Beach (714) 964-5926 Koreatown (213) 386-6884 • Lawndale (310) 214-8704 • North Hollywood (818) 766-7184 Pacoima (818) 890-5515 • Palmdale (661) 947-4545 • Pasadena (626) 577-1723 Saugus (661) 259-3895 • Simi Valley (805) 522-2586 • Wilshire/Highland (323) 939-7661 These are non-paid positions for college credit and resume building. If you are interested in covering the LA entertainment scene, contact us via email at managing.editor@campuscircle.net. Expires 12/31/14 4 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 Film | Music | Culture NEWS: LOCAL STUCK IN L.A. ON TURKEY DAY? Here Are 8 Fun Things To Do! Westside Thanksgiving is open to everyone, including students! THANKSGIVING IS TRADITIONALLY A HOLIDAY SPENT WITH FAMILY, FRIENDS AND LOVED ONES. But for many students, that’s not the case. If you live out of state and can’t afford the plane trip home or you have a job or internship commitment you can’t break, then Thanksgiving means spending that time alone with a Hungry Man TV dinner or with other unlucky students that have to make due with dining hall food instead of Mom’s delicious turkey dinner. That may not be your ideal Thanksgiving Break, but don’t let it get you down: There are plenty of things going on in Los Angeles that will lift your spirits—just take a look! THANKSGIVING EVENTS Westside Thanksgiving Thursday, Nov. 27 at VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System Price: Free Open to everyone, including students, Westside Thanksgiving offers a free sit-down dinner. You can either go as a guest or volunteer. If you’re interested in giving back this year, you can bring a roasted turkey or a pie (follow the directions at westsidethanksgiving.org), help set up the event the day before or work a two-hour shift the day of. Many missions and charities are already booked on volunteers, so this may be your best bet to do some charity work in L.A. this Thanksgiving. Tofurky Trot 2014 Thursday, Nov. 27 at the Rose Bowl Price: $25 Help raise money for the National Museum of Animals & Society by participating in the Pasadena-located Tofurky Trot, where you will be running for turkeys. Prizes and coupons will be awarded to the top male, female and children finishers as well as for best costumes. There will also be random prize drawings along with www.CampusCircle.com BY CAMPUS CIRCLE STAFF vegan snacks and drinks at the finish line. Big Bear Turkey Trot Thursday, Nov. 27 at Meadow Park, Big Bear Lake Price: $30-$50 If you feel like getting out of the city and going on a mini-road trip, check out the Big Bear Turkey Trot. Run 3 miles, 6 miles or 9 miles, and win a well-deserved turkey by coming in first place. There will also be a costume contest with great prizes for best costumes, including best turkey and best bear costumes, along with a post-race, pie-eating contest with more great prizes. 35th Annual Free Thanksgiving Feast at Laugh Factory Thursday, Nov. 27 @ Laugh Factory in Hollywood Price: Free Part of the L.A. experience is going to the Laugh Factory at least once, and this Thanksgiving, you can get free laughs AND a free dinner! Dinner times are 1 p.m., 3 p.m., 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Top comics will join other celebrities and perform live shows following each meal served throughout the day. Check back on the website (laughfactory.com) to find out who will be performing. OTHER GREAT STUFF! Besides volunteering and donating, take this time off from your classes to enjoy other great events happening during break. L.A. Auto Show Until Sunday, Nov. 30 @ L.A. Convention Center Price: $15 You might be a broke college student now, but who says you can’t start planning for the future? That future probably includes a sweet new car, so dream a little at this year’s L.A. Auto Show. See the latest cars and everything else car-related, including world and North American debuts, concept cars, alternative fuel vehicles, design challenges, trivia contests and more. Catch a Classic Movie on the Big Screen We’re not sure if you know this, but besides the new movies that come out every week, some L.A. theaters play your favorite classics: Jurassic Park, Singin’ in the Rain and Gone with the Wind are a few films that will playing at theaters such as the Nuart and Aero during Thanksgiving Day weekend. Record Store Day: Back to Black Friday Friday, Nov. 28 Black Friday—you either love it or you hate it. If you love it (or at least don’t mind it), then brave the crowds and head to Record Store Day: Back to Black Friday. Dozens of indie music stores in SoCal will be offering special deals, promos, appearances and music that you can’t find online. Visit recordstoreday.com for a list of venues. Hollywood Christmas Parade Sunday, Nov. 30 at Hollywood & Highland Center Price: Free Everyone knows that Thanksgiving basically means Christmas is almost here, so get into the holiday spirit at the Hollywood Christmas Parade! This annual tradition for over 80 years will include celebrities from film, television and stage; awardwinning bands; colorful equestrians; ornate floats and specialty characters. The parade will start on Hollywood Boulevard at Orange, and the U-shaped parade route will travel east to Vine, south on Vine to Sunset Boulevard and west on Sunset, back to Orange. CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 5 COLLEGE CENTRAL CALIF. COLLEGE STUDENT DEBT AT GRADUATION LOWER THAN NATIONAL AVERAGE BETTER GRAD PROGRAMMES KEEP CHINESE STUDENTS AT HOME RICK NEASE/MCT BY KATY MURPHY THE OAKLAND TRIBUNE/MCT CALIFORNIA COLLEGE STUDENTS graduate with less debt than students in most states, and university, state and federal policy has shielded the state’s low-income students from the dramatic fee increases of the past decade, according to two separate reports released Wednesday night. A third new report, analyzing college tuition sticker prices nationally, found that the rapid rate of increases had slowed; the hikes this year, though higher than inflation, were less than the average increases of the past five, 10 and 30 years, in all sectors. In-state tuition at public, four-year colleges across the nation rose 2.9 percent between 2013 and 2014 to $9,139, while tuition and fees at private nonprofit colleges rose by 3.7 percent to $31,231, according to the College Board’s latest Trends in College Pricing report. Those tuition figures do not reflect what students actually pay, on average, after discounts and grants. Nor do they include the substantial costs of room and board, which bring the total price, without financial aid, to $18,943 for in-state public college students nationally and $42,419 for those at private colleges, according to the College Board. UC Berkeley is charging $14,414 this year for campus housing and food, more than the cost of annual tuition and fees. At San Jose State, the average cost to live and eat on campus this year -$11,800 -- is more than 60 percent higher than the school’s tuition bill. But compared to most other states, California college students are graduating with a lighter debt load. A new Project on Student Debt report placed California on the “Low-Debt States” list for the class of 2013, with graduating seniors at four-year public and nonprofit private colleges owing an average of $20,340 -- the second-lowest in the nation behind New Mexico. In New Hampshire, Delaware and Pennsylvania, by contrast, the average undergraduate debt was more than $32,000. The national average was $28,400. The state averages were based on data that 1,108 colleges voluntarily submitted to the Peterson’s college guide publisher. The figures have not been audited. Generally, debt levels are driven by a number of factors, including tuition, state policy, cost of living in the area, student demographics, and the amount of aid available at a college. “The importance of state policy and investment cannot be overstated when it comes to student debt levels,” said Debbie Cochrane, research director at The Institute for College Access & Success and co-author of the Project on Student Debt report. A report released this week by the Public Policy Institute of California highlighted the powerful effect of financial aid policies. At California State University and the University of California, students on federal financial aid -- CSU students with family incomes of less than $75,000 and UC students with family incomes of as much as $110,000 -- saw virtually no change in their net tuition despite the systems’ exponential tuition hikes between 2008 and 2011, the Public Policy Institute of California reported this week. In addition to federal grants, California students might qualify for need-based state money that covers systemwide tuition and fees as well as assistance from their campuses. Students who entered the country illegally as children may apply for state grants and campus assistance, though they still are ineligible for federal aid. “Low-income students who successfully navigate the financial aid process pay little or no tuition at UC or CSU,” said Jacob Jackson, a PPIC research fellow and author of the report. “Given the importance of higher education in California’s future, it is more important than ever to reach students who are eligible for aid but don’t apply for it,” he said. The findings of all three reports are likely to be cited next week, when the UC Regents consider a proposal to increase systemwide tuition and fees by as much as 5 percent a year through 2019-20. The system has kept tuition at 2011 levels in exchange for additional state funding, a condition set by Gov. Jerry Brown. BY PAUL WELITZKIN ASIA NEWS NETWORK/MCT CHRIS WALKER/CHICAGO TRIBUNE/MCT Follow Katy Murphy at Twitter.com/katymurphy. BEIJING (CHINA DAILY/ANN) – More students than ever, led by those from India, are enrolling in U.S. graduate schools, but the number of Chinese students has declined slightly—a decline due in part to improved programmes in China according to a report released Nov. 12. The report from the Council of Graduate Schools shows that first-time enrollments of students from China dropped 1 percent in 2014, the first decline measured since the survey was initiated in 2004. According to the report, the number of international students at U.S. graduate programmes rose between 7 and 10 percent from 2008-13. That growth was driven by Chinese students until 2012, when their numbers peaked. The number of students from India jumped 30 percent and 24 percent in the last two years to surpass the Chinese. The change in Chinese first-time enrollment involves a relatively large number of students, since Chinese students constitute 33 percent of the total enrollment of international graduate students in the U.S., the report said. “This is the first year that it has gone down,” Jason Lane, a professor of international education at the State University of New York at Albany, said last week. “Previously, there had been huge increases in Chinese students. Last year the increase was 1 percent and this year there was a 1 percent decline.” Philip G. Altbach, director of Boston College’s Centre for International Higher Education, said Chinese graduate students now have access to improved graduate programmes in China. “China has increased its number and capacity of high-quality graduate programmes,” he said. “Chinese students now have options at home to pursue advanced degrees they didn’t have several years ago.” Lane agreed, adding that Chinese students also have more choices to when seeking an overseas education. “China has always been a leading sender of students, and Canada has been aggressive in recruiting foreign students, as have several European countries,” he said. The reduction in the number of Chinese students who study at U.S. graduate schools may simply reflect the end of the Chinese baby boom, said Chen Naibo, director of curricula of Quakers Education, a consultancy for overseas study in Beijing. There has been a decrease in the total number of Chinese college students, Chen said. “China has passed its baby boom period. And Chinese universities have started to compete for students,” he said, adding that a majority of Chinese students who enrolled in the U.S. graduate schools went straight from college without working experience. But not all U.S. graduate schools are experiencing a decline in interest. Timothy Brunold, dean of admissions at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, said applications from Chinese students have increased. “Chinese international students currently account for about 25 percent of our overall graduate applicant pool. Five years ago, they accounted for 19 percent of our graduate applicant pool. So, not only are their numbers increasing, but so is their share in our pool,” he told China Daily in an e-mail. Ohio State University in Columbus, said that Chinese graduate students in the fall of this year totaled 1,219, up slightly from 1,189 in the fall of 2013. As for students from India surpassing Chinese applicants in the U.S., Altbach said that Indian students may not have the same resources in their native country that are available to the Chinese. “Unlike China, India has not invested heavily in its PhD-level education, so their students are seeking a higher-quality experience,” he said. “Another factor is the stricter visa requirements from the U.K. and Australia, which are popular choices for Indian students.” ©2014 The Oakland Tribune (Oakland, Calif.) Visit The Oakland Tribune (Oakland, Calif.) at www.insidebayarea.com Distributed by MCT Information Services ©2014 the Asia News Network (Hamburg, Germany) Visit the Asia News Network (Hamburg, Germany) at www.asianewsnet.net/home/ Distributed by MCT Information Services 6 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 Film | Music | Culture SPORTS: FOOTBALL ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES/MCT GINA FERAZZI/LOS ANGELES TIMES/MCT The Trojans are 7-3 and are ranked 1st in South Division. The Bruins are 8-2 and are ranked 2nd in South Division. A preview of the upcoming USC-UCLA football game. SATURDAY, NOV. 22, marks the 85th meeting of USC (7-3) and UCLA (8-2) football. Both teams have had disappointing seasons to this point, but there remains a lot on the line this weekend at the Rose Bowl. UCLA is currently ranked 11th in the AP Top 25 poll at press time and still has a slim chance of qualifying for the inaugural College Football Playoff. If they are able to beat USC and Stanford, their final two opponents of the regular season, and Arizona State takes a loss, UCLA would play Oregon in the Pac12 Championship game and have an opportunity to show the nation that they deserve one of the four playoff slots. The Bruins would need to have everything break right in order to remain a contender come January, but crazier things have happened in college football. After consecutive October losses to Utah and Oregon, most predicted UCLA’s season was finished, that they wouldn’t be able to regroup and win the Pac-12. But, four straight victories have put them back in the hunt. Quarterback Brett Hundley has recovered from some early-season inconsistencies and helped right the ship with several weeks of solid play, mostly by becoming more confident in his running ability. Paul Perkins, also, has been one of the premier running backs in the Pac-12 this year and has accumulated more than 1,100 yards with 6 touchdowns. For the Trojans, this game is more about pride. Typically the dominant football school in Los Angeles, USC has lost to UCLA each of the last two years. This game, and their matchup with Notre Dame to close the season, will be hugely important to building momentum going into next season, when the NCAA sanctions are finally through. USC has had a very inconsistent year, though. After starting out strong with a victory over Stanford, they lost to unranked Boston College in their third game, and have since also dropped games to Arizona State and Utah. In Steve www.CampusCircle.com Sarkisian’s first season as head coach, the Trojans’ offense has looked incredible, but has repeatedly come up flat in crunch time. His offensive system has definitely helped quarterback Cody Kessler, who has thrown for 29 touchdowns and only 3 interceptions this year – one of the best TD-INT ratios in all of college football. It’s also been a good year for playmakers Nelson Agholor and Javorius “Buck” Allen, who have both accrued over 1,000 yards. USC is the only team in the nation, so far at least, to have both a running back and wide receiver each surpass the 1,000-yard mark. Unlike the Bruins, the Trojans don’t really have any shot of qualifying for the playoff. The best they can hope for is to end the year ranked as one of the top 10 teams in the country and to play spoiler to UCLA and Notre Dame, their two archrivals. Trojans fans are already locked in on the significance of Saturday’s game against the Bruins, knowing that it’s going to be the biggest game of the season for both teams. There is a long and storied history of pranks between USC and UCLA during the weeks leading up to their annual matchup. It began in 1941, when USC students stole the Victory Bell – the prize awarded to whichever team wins that year’s Trojans-Bruins football game – from the UCLA campus. Since then, pranks have occurred almost every year, including UCLA students kidnapping USC fans and handcuffing them to fire hydrants, and USC releasing thousands of cardinal-and-gold-painted crickets into a UCLA library. The crux of the prank war, however, has involved the desecration of each school’s famous statue: Tommy Trojan and the Bruin Bear. At first, fans would simply attempt to dump paint on each other’s statue, but it has become more intense in recent decades. One year, UCLA fans used a blowtorch to steal Tommy Trojan’s sword. Another year, UCLA fans attempted to dump fertilizer on Tommy Trojan from a helicopter, but instead, the helicopter’s BY RYAN BOUZIANE propellers sucked it back inside the vessel, covering the would-be pranksters in manure. In recent years, the schools have formed groups responsible for guarding the statues during the week leading up to the football game, and the statues themselves are covered in order to protect them from damage. But, it appears some USC fans have thwarted the Bruin line of defense this year and were able to spray paint “SC RUNS LA” on the Bruin Bear. This rivalry, however, goes even further than pranks. At UCLA, the week before the game is known as “Beat ‘SC week”, while at USC the week is called “Conquest,” which is capped off by a huge rally and concert that used to include the incineration of a massive stuffed bear. The USC-UCLA rivalry is one of the oldest in sports, and is special because of their closeness within Los Angeles. Whereas traditional rivalries such as Auburn-Alabama or Duke-North Carolina are stretched over entire states, the disdain between the Trojans and Bruins is contained to Los Angeles, which serves as home to both schools. This leads to constant declarations that one school or the other is THE school of Los Angeles. This rivalry, though, comes with at least a few ounces of respect, as both schools recognize the other’s athletic and academic achievements. UCLA has the most recognized championships in NCAA history with 111, and USC is close behind in third place. Additionally, UCLA and USC are recognized as two of the premier collegiate institutions in the world, let alone California. But, any modicums of respect for the other school are put on hiatus for now. This week is about football, and only one can wear the crown. USC battles UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Saturday, Nov. 22 at 5 p.m. PST. CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 7 MUSIC: FEATURE STREAMING POSES A DILEMMA FOR MUSICIANS, FANS BY DAN DELUCA TO STREAM OR NOT TO STREAM: THAT IS THE QUESTION. Back in July, when Taylor Swift was plotting the pop-music takeover that culminated in sales of almost 1.3 million copies of her album 1989 in its debut week, she wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal. Widely mocked as naive at the time, the 24-year-old songwriter — who made news recently by pulling her music off Spotify, the world’s biggest streaming music service — used Rupert Murdoch’s bully pulpit to share her optimistic view that “the music industry is not dying . . . it’s just coming alive.” Easy for her to say, you might grouse, considering that she’s since proved capable of selling more albums in a week than anyone since Eminem circa 2002. To appreciate the extent to which she is “defying retail gravity,” as former Billboard editor Bill Werde phrased it to NPR, consider this: In the week before the release of 1989, the top 200 albums on the Billboard chart sold a combined total of 1.53 million copies, barely outpacing 1989. Swift’s upbeat attitude is surely rooted in her own exceptionalism, not to mention her laserlike focus on achieving sales goals through social-media bonding. (Search the Twitter hashtag #taylurking to see the phenomenon in action.) She celebrated her boffo week by posting a video of herself lip-synching to “Backseat Freestyle,” by rapper Kendrick Lamar, who has recently declared himself a mutually admiring fan. But in the Wall Street Journal piece, Swift had salient points to make about the devaluation of music. “Music should not be free,” she insisted, and not just because just because she wants to be even richer. (So far in 2014, she’s made $64 million, according to Forbes, and she’ll make plenty more by bringing in approximately 70 cents on the dollar through download sales, as a opposed to the royalty rate paid out by Spotify, which has 40 million users worldwide, of between $0.006 and $0.0084 per individual song stream.) Many in the music industry see streaming as the only hope for growing revenue. According to the Recording Industry Association of America, revenues from streaming, which the RIAA defines as including YouTube and Pandora as well as satellite radio and Spotify, have more than offset a decline in money brought in by paid downloads in 2014. And before there was streaming, the plague was illegal downloading, which has been on the decline. But those minuscule Spotify payouts have prompted a growing number of major acts, from David Byrne to Beyoncé to the Beatles, to withhold some or all of their music from the service. Radiohead leader Thom Yorke, who sold his new album Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes for $6 on the file-sharing BitTorrent platform, has called Spotify “the last desperate fart of a dying corpse.” Patrick Carney of the Black Keys has also ranted. “My whole thing about music is: If somebody’s making money, then the artist should be getting a fair cut of it,” he told the Seattle Times. Referring to CEO Daniel Ek, Carney said: “The owner of Spotify is worth something like $3 billion. He’s richer than Paul McCartney and he’s 30 and he’s never written a song.” And recently R&B star Aloe Blacc chimed in, penning an anti-streaming piece for Wired magazine, which tweeted out the headline: “I support Taylor Swift — streaming services are killing music.” In her op-ed, Swift wrote: “Music is art, art is important and rare. Important, rare things are valuable. Valuable things should be paid for.” That’s a noble idea that would be easier to live by if the Internet had never happened, and of course, if the Internet had never happened, the Wyomissing, Pa., native wouldn’t have 46 million followers. But Swift’s larger point — that if they can afford to, musicians shouldn’t cheapen their music by just giving it away — is valid. She wrote that she hopes artists don’t “underestimate themselves or undervalue their art.” It’s a notion lost on U2, who thought they were being brilliant when they automatically placed their new album, Songs of Innocence, in the music libraries of 500 million iTunes users, only to incite a PR backlash after non-fans came to regard the Irish band’s intrusion as so much unwanted spam. Carney’s two cents: U2 “devalued its music completely” by pushing it on listeners whether wanted or not. “It sends a huge mixed message to bands that are just struggling to get by.” Of course, for bands struggling to get by, struggling even to be heard, keeping their music off streaming services is not so easy. Such acts need to get their music out any way they can, and if they’re going to make money the new-fashioned way — by touring, endorsement deals, and licensing their songs for use in TV and video games — people need to be able to have easy access to it. To stream or not to stream is a thorny dilemma for fans, too. I resent the way the streaming model puts ownership of the music back in the hands of industry muckety-mucks. Rather than letting you own your collection, the music biz is moving relentlessly toward a model similar to on-demand cable TV or Netflix, in which the entirety of music history is (theoretically) available 8 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 BIG MACHINE LABEL GROUP THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER/MCT Taylor Swift recently removed all of her music from the popular musicstreaming app, Spotify. whenever and wherever. The catch is that you, the user, pay over and over again, whether by hearing an ad or with a subscription fee. Despite those misgivings, Spotify is a pretty good deal: $9.99 a month for ease of use in building and sharing playlists, and the ability to hear a song once it pops into your head, like when you’re driving to work and playing Mott the Hoople’s “All the Young Dudes” seems absolutely necessary at that very moment. Having millions of songs at your disposal and trying to decide what to click on can be a paralyzing experience, however. Whether you do your shopping on iTunes, Amazon, or your local mom-and-pop store, it’s not conducive to the kind of intimate bonding with a favorite artist that comes when you care about something enough to actually purchase it. That’s one reason live performance has become so crucial. Yes, bands can make money (sometimes), but it also gives fans a chance to make a human connection with the artists they love. Swift has proved herself an expert at forging those connections. And with her latest trick of pulling her music off Spotify, she strengthens her bond with her followers by making them have to buy her album to prove how much they love her. ©2014 The Philadelphia Inquirer Visit The Philadelphia Inquirer at www.philly.com Distributed by MCT Information Services Film | Music | Culture MUSIC: REVIEW ONE DIRECTION’S FOUR – HOW QUICKLY THEY GROW UP RJ SHAUGHNESSY ONE DIRECTION Four (Syco/Columbia) 3 stars out of 4 BY MIKAEL WOOD LOS ANGELES TIMES/MCT IT’S AN INDICATION OF HOW QUICKLY LIFE MOVES for the lads of One Direction that their idea of ancient history appears to be 2012. That’s when Harry Styles — the youngest (and arguably dreamiest) member of this British boy band — was 18, an age he and his mates recall on their new album as though the memory were nearly lost to the mists of time. “I have loved you since we were 18,” they sing over strummed acoustic guitar in “18,” as full of yearning as James Garner at the end of The Notebook. “I want a love like you made me feel when we were 18.” The exaggerated emotion of youth? Well, duh — that’s the business One Direction is in. Here’s the thing, though: Go back and listen to Styles at that age — on the band’s second album, Take Me Home — and two years really does seem like an eternity. There’s no sense on Four, released this week, of the excitable, fresh-faced kids first assembled by Simon Cowell on the British edition of “The X Factor.” And there’s only a trace of the rowdy rock crew heard on last year’s Midnight Memories, the success of which helped drive ticket sales for One Direction’s recent stadium tour. Instead, the band’s fourth record reveals a group of soft-pop smoothies, now aged 20 to 22, pulling from the same hip reference points as your average Coachella act: Fleetwood Mac, the Beach Boys, David Bowie. They’re growing up not by going wild but — get this — by relaxing. And the result is their best work yet. That connection to Midnight Memories, by the way, comes right at the top of Four in the form of “Steal My Girl,” which (in a sly nod to the earlier album’s Who-mimicking “Best Song Ever”) begins as a virtual replica of “Faithfully” by Journey. Once it kicks in, though, the song’s slow-motion beat provides a swagger that feels new for One Direction, which even at its naughtiest would never have been mistaken for a threat. “Everybody wanna steal my girl / Everybody wanna take her heart away,” they sing. “Couple billion in the whole wide world / Find another one ‘cause she belongs to me.” They’re similarly sure of themselves in “Fireproof,” in which they insist, “Nobody knows you, baby, the way I do,” over a hypnotic groove that echoes Fleetwood Mac’s “Gypsy.” (Other songs openly crib riffs from Tears for Fears and the French band Phoenix, yet another sign of the group’s confidence.) But even when thoughts of romance turn darker — as in “Where Do Broken Hearts Go” and “Fool’s Gold,” about knowingly falling for a lover who “turned it on for everyone you met” — the music stays lustrous, even sensual, with shimmering guitars and unhurried beats. “Stockholm Syndrome” sets a story about being taken hostage against sleek disco licks that make the scenario, one surely imagined in the oodles of One Direction fan fiction found online, sound like a kinky good time. In “Night Changes,” they’re worrying about aging: “We’re only getting older, baby, and I’ve been thinking about it lately / Does it ever drive you crazy just how fast the night changes?” Again, though, the steady tempo and sleepy vocals, closely miked to catch every slur and crack, suggest that growing up is just another term for chilling out. That’s hardly a realization in sync with the demand for a boy band to stay forever young. But assuming they don’t first split for the inevitable solo careers to come, it might be what keeps One Direction together. At least for two more long years. ©2014 Los Angeles Times Visit the Los Angeles Times at www.latimes.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC www.CampusCircle.com SEE IT AT THE HOME OF THE U. S. P R E M I E R E OPENS THURSDAY NOVEMBER 20 RESERVE YOUR SEAT NOW! lalive.com/mockingjay “GRADE: A. STEVE CARELL, CHANNING TATUM, AND MARK RUFFALO ARE EXTRAORDINARY. IT’S RARE TO SEE AN AMERICAN MOVIE THAT EXPLORES, LET ALONE ACKNOWLEDGES, THE CLASS SYSTEM IN THIS COUNTRY, OR ONE THAT GETS SO FAR INSIDE THE ABYSS OF THE ETHIC THAT DRIVES SO MANY MEN TO SUCCEED – AND TO IMPLODE WHEN THEY DON’T. AND YET THE STORY IS SO POWERFULLY OBSERVED THAT IT DOES INDEED BECOME LARGER THAN ITSELF – AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY.” -Peter Rainer, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR WINNER B E S T D I R E C TO R CANNES FILM FESTIVAL FROM THE DIRECTOR OF “M O N E Y B A L L” A N D “C A P O T E” STEVE CARELL CHANNING TATUM MARK RUFFALO FOXCATCHER SONY PICTURES CLASSICS PRESENTS AN ANNAPURNA PICTURES PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH LIKELY STORY A FILM BY BENNETT MILLER “FOXCATCHER” STEVE CARELL CHANNING TATUM MARK RUFFALO AND VANESSA REDGRAVE CASTING BY JEANNE McCARTHY, C.S.A. MUSIC SUPERVISOR SUSAN JACOBS MUSIC BY ROB SIMONSEN ADDITIONAL MUSIC BY WEST DYLAN THORDSON COSTUME DESIGNER KASIA WALICKA-MAIMONE EDITED BY STUART LEVY, A.C.E. CONOR O’NEILL JAY CASSIDY, A.C.E. PRODUCTION DESIGNER JESS GONCHOR DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY GREIG FRASER, ASC CO-PRODUCER SCOTT ROBERTSON EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS CHELSEA BARNARD RON SCHMIDT MARK BAKSHI MICHAEL COLEMAN TOM HELLER JOHN P. GIURA PRODUCED BY MEGAN ELLISON BENNETT MILLER JON KILIK ANTHONY BREGMAN WRITTEN BY E. MAX FRYE AND DAN FUTTERMAN DIRECTED BY BENNETT MILLER © MMXIV FAIR HILL LLC - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED WWW.FOXCATCHERMOVIE.COM WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM NOW PLAYING IN SELECT CITIES! ★ ★U★ ★ ★ PERTLY NSETTLING “ AN EX ” . M IL F R O R HOR E OUT NEW YORK -Joshua Rothkopf, TIM “THE SCARIEST HORROR MOVIE YOU HAVE TO SEE RIGHT NOW.” -Jen Ortiz, GQ , T A E R T E M O S UREENT KIND OF NAIL-BITER A GDR IFFE “ A .” PORTER E HOLLYWOOD RE -David Rooney, TH EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT STARTS FRIDAY, NOV 28 CINEFAMILY 611 NORTH FAIRFAX AVENUE (323) 655-2510 • LOS ANGELES CAMPUS CIRCLE NEWS STAND DATE WED NOV 19 .5page The Comedy Cooking Show Just for Dudes, Dude! with SEAN and sometimes ADAM EXCLUSIVELY ON /DudeFood 12 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 Film | Music | Culture MUSIC: Q&A SOKO OPENS UP ON LIFE AS AN INDIE ARTIST The singer talks about her future projects. BY JACOB GAITAN You might’ve seen Soko in the viral video “First Kiss,” released earlier this year. FRENCH INDIE-FOLK SINGER SOKO has set her sights on capturing the independent artist mountain while recently touring with Foster the People. Consumed with passion and overwhelming emotion, she wanders from city to city, wearing her heart on her sleeve, a notepad in hand and documenting each event worth immortalizing. We caught up with the songstress before she played at Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium earlier this month. Campus Circle: Can you shed some light into the making of the new album and the direction in which it’s taken compared to your previous musical efforts? What were your thoughts on collaborating with Ross Robinson? Soko: I reached out to Ross in the first place because I wanted him to hook me up with Robert Smith and have him produce my record. But he never answered. Ross reached out saying, “I’ll help you with your record.” Two days later, we started recording. The direction I was taking was very clear even in the way the songs were written—very raw, more dreamy, more punk-y, more goth-y, more fun, more epic. Ross is the master at capturing the most vibrant, vital, vulnerable vibe […] We recorded at his house in Venice beach, would go to yoga in the morning together and then just record all day every day for a good six months of fun. Now I consider him family. Outside of music, you’re a highly talented actor having starred in multiple French films as well as a voice over in the Oscar-nominated film Her. Currently living in Southern California, are there any ambitions in pursuing an acting www.CampusCircle.com ROBIN BLACK career after supporting the upcoming album release? I do love acting and miss it ‘cause I’ve been so rich with music the past few years. I actually have five movies booked for 2015. I hope I have time to do it all. I’m really nervous about it. But I have a good team that is watching out for me and is good at making things happen. You’re highly versatile across multiple platforms, including on-stage live performances or cinematic deliveries. Having directed several music videos of your own, is there a platform where you feel most comfortable? Is maintaining a creative stance the priority objective? Yes. If I don’t feel creative or don’t challenge myself with new creative endeavors, I just get bored. There’s one thing in life I can’t stand: being bored. So, I always keep myself busy with a million creative outlets. Directing my music videos is definitely some of my favorite little side things to do. I’m directing two new ones. Very excited about that. Recently, you debuted the song “Bad Poetry” into your set list in Orlando. The upbeat tempo and melodic dance beats provide an energetic volt that captivates the audience. Could this be considered a speck of light into the direction the unreleased album is headed? Hahaha! How do you even knooooowwww? Yes indeed, I’ve been laying a lot of songs out of the new record on this tour. It’s been really fun to play them live. And “Bad Poetry” definitely reflects the new sort of dreamy vibe of the record. The music industry has struggled to maintain a profit with album sales over the past decade. Artists have independently released their work free of charge while others have partnered with major companies. Can you see a future where music content becomes an open platform in the future? What are your thoughts on tomorrow’s musical approach, and is it salvageable from a monetary standpoint? I seriously have no clue. All I know is that I made a record and want people to hear it. I don’t care how they do it. It’s really hard to survive as an indie musician making “just” music today. I lose money each time I go on tour. I have to DJ and continue acting to make sure I can still do music. All of this is giving me MAJOR anxiety. The creative accolades you’ve accomplished under the age of 30 are definitely something to be proud about. Outside of the already mention creative mediums you’ve ventured on, is there any other form of expression you would like to address? Ha! Thanks. I’m pretty happy with everything I’ve got to do so far. I do so much only because I’m so scared to die young that I want to make sure that if I die tomorrow, I’d have accomplished enough stuff that I needed to during my life. Does that make sense? I definitely want to direct a feature film soon enough. I have a few ideas that have been blooming for years. With the year quickly approaching the end, what can fans expect from you in 2015? Any current details that you can share? My record will be release early next year, and hopefully I’ll get to tour as much as possible and do a bunch of movies too! CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 13 FILM: FEATURE The holidays are OUR TOP MOVIE PICKS THIS Into the Woods upon us! Here DISNEY Exodus: Gods and Kings TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX are a few films coming out in the next few weeks you should be Into the Woods Credit: Disney looking out for. The Interview ED ARAQUEL FRIDAY, NOV. 21 The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 Jennifer Lawrence is back in the penultimate entry to one of the most popular and successful franchises ever. Though The Hunger Games movies are imperfect and often suffer from excessive melodrama and predictability, there remains a lot to like here. The series, based on books from Suzanne Collins, serves as an interesting commentary on governmental autonomy and the power of public rebellion. Additionally, Mockingjay will be one of our last opportunities to see the amazing Philip Seymour Hoffman on screen. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 26 Horrible Bosses 2 Reconnect with characters that had us ROFL three years ago in the first Horrible Bosses! The new sequel seems to follow the first film’s formula, with plenty of laughs throughout. Jason Bateman, Charlie Day and Jason Sudeikis reunite as aspiring CEOs with dreams of creating the “shower buddy,” a device you can take into the shower to wash your body and hair. But when they’re screwed over by a slick investor (Christoph Waltz), they deiced to poorly execute a kidnapping scheme that involves the investor’s son, played by Chris Pine. Speaking of which, Pine (Star Trek) must be given his due credit for taking on this film. Not only does he pull off the pretty-boy charm, but he has comedic chops as well. FRIDAY, NOV. 28 The Babadook Books can’t hurt you…right? Maybe not. In this thriller, Amelia (Essie Davis) is at a loss six years after the violent death of her husband. She struggles to discipline her out of control 6-yearold (Noah Wiseman) whose dreams are plagued by a monster he believes is coming to kill them both. When a disturbing storybook called The Babadook turns up at their house, Samuel is convinced it is the creature he’s been dreaming about. And when Amelia begins to see glimpses of a sinister presence all around her, it slowly dawns on her that the thing her son has 14 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 Wild FOX SEARCHLIGHT been warning her about may be real. If the trailer is of any indication, expect to be spooked. In Pyramid, an archaeological team explores a lost pyramid. However, what they find is something insidious. The Imitation Game Along with “Game of Thrones,” “Mad Men” and a few other shows, BBC’s “Sherlock” is considered by many critics to be the best thing on television today. This is largely due to the titular character’s performance by Benedict Cumberbatch, who, in The Imitation Game, plays a famous British mathematician that was instrumental in cracking the code of German communication in WWII. This film tells that true story, and more, leading up to his 1952 trial in the U.K. for the crime of homosexuality. Serving as a war representation, a technology film, a court trial story and a social commentary, there’s definitely a lot to be excited about here. Miss Julie Now here’s a romantic matchup we like: Jessica Chastain and Colin Farrell star in a new film that’s all about power, dominance, seduction and repulsion (no, it’s not Fifty Shades of Grey). It’s called Miss Julie. Set in the Irish countryside in the 1880s, the film takes place over the course of one midsummer night where Miss Julie (Chastain) and John (Farrell), her father’s valet, dance, drink, charm and manipulate each other. Their intimacy eventually leads to desperate plans and vision of a life together, and Julie and John find their escape in a final act as sublime and horrific as anything in Greek tragedy. FRIDAY, DEC. 5 Wild You might’ve gone backpacking one summer or one semester while studying abroad in Europe, but we doubt you’ve ever contemplated walking 1,000 miles. Starring Reese Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Thomas Sadoski and Gaby Hoffmann, Wild follows the reckless, heroin-addicted Cheryl Strayed (Witherspoon) on the brink of divorce. Haunted by memories of her mother Bobbi (Laura Dern) and with absolutely no experience, she sets out to hike the Pacific Crest Trail all on her own. The film powerfully reveals her terrors and pleasures as she forges ahead on a journey that maddens, strengthens and ultimately heals her. Directed by the same guy who directed Dallas Buyers Club and already receiving rave reviews, Wild surely won’t disappoint. The Pyramid It’s been awhile since audiences have been gifted with a good mummy movie since, well, The Mummy in 1999. Thankfully, Fox is brining us The Pyramid. But don’t expect Brendan Fraser’s good looks and sarcasm in this film. Oh no, Grégory Levasseur’s latest project has a much more sinister vibe, which is what you should expect from the writer of The Hills Have Eyes and P2. FRIDAY, DEC. 12 Exodus: Gods and Kings As we’ve seen with Noah, biblical films can be pretty hit or miss. But when you’ve got Ridley Scott (Alien, Gladiator, Hannibal) as the director, you really don’t have anything to worry about. Plus, the star-studded cast—Christian Bale, Aaron Paul and Sigourney Weaver—pretty much ensures you’ll be seeing a strong theatrical performance. Exodus: Gods and Kings is Moses’ story of setting 600,000 slaves free from Pharaoh Ramses. If you’re unfamiliar with the biblical story, recall the animated hit The Prince of Egypt but with real actors, more special effects and no Whitney Houston/Mariah Carey mash-up. Top Five Funny-man Chris Rock is the writer/director/star of this upcoming comedy! Rock plays a wildly successful comedian (hmm, semi-auto-biographical maybe? Or perhaps his alter ego?) that suddenly doesn’t “feel funny anymore.” It’s like he’s having a celebrity mid-life crisis. So, he spends the day with a journalist from the Times and reflects on his life. At the Toronto Film Fest, Top Five impressed the critics (it’s a “ferociously funny snapshot of life in the celebrity bubble,” declared Variety). Along with Rock, the film’s impressive lineup also includes Rosario Film | Music | Culture FILM: FEATURE 2014 HOLIDAY SEASON! The Babadook BY CAMPUS CIRCLE STAFF MATT NETTHEIM Horrible Bosses 2 JOHN P. JOHNSON/WARNER BROS. PICTURES/MCT The Hobbit COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES Dawson, Kevin Hart, Whoopi Goldberg, Gabrielle Union, Cedric the Entertainer and whole bunch of other comedy favorites! Free the Nipple Did you know that in 35 states it is illegal for a woman to be topless? And in New York City, which legalized public toplessness in 1992, police continue to arrest women who choose to expose their chests? Yep, it’s true. Free the Nipple is a movement that has gained support from women everywhere, including celebs like Miley Cyrus and Lena Dunham. Inspired by true events, the film follows a group of women as they try to change the censorship laws in America by walking in NYC topless. (Warning: Contains nudity, obviously). Inherent Vice Paul Thomas Anderson is among the best directors working today. From Boogie Nights and Punch-Drunk Love to The Master and There Will Be Blood, over the past few decades Anderson has proved himself a visionary when it comes to creating thoughtprovoking films that challenge viewers’ expectations and sensibilities. The plot for his newest film is so weird – a drug-filled Los Angeles convergence of surfers, hustlers, dentists, murderers, police and a saxophone player – that it doesn’t even really matter. PTA films aren’t about what happens on screen; they’re about giving the viewers an experience that sticks with them, sometimes making them examine different aspects of their life through a new lens. Inherent Vice stars Joaquin Phoenix and is based on a book from Thomas Pynchon, who wrote the screenplay alongside Anderson. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 17 The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies The legend of Bilbo Baggins and the Company of Dwarves www.CampusCircle.com continues with the third installment based off the popular J.R.R. Tolkien novels. Picking up where the prequel left off—with the evil dragon Smaug on the loose—The Battle of the Five Armies has been described as the saga’s “defining chapter.” While Smaug is unleashing his fiery wrath, the Orcs are ready to attack. The only question: Will the dwarves, elves and men unite against the evil forces…or will they fall? Expect award-worthy special effects, action and a lot of fighting. FRIDAY, DEC. 19 Annie Music, dancing, singing, Jamie Foxx and Cameron Diaz – what else do you really need to know? Annie has always been a holiday classic on stage and on screen, and this latest adaptation with a modern twist promises to tug at your heartstrings, much thanks to the adorable Quvenzhané Wallis. Mr. Turner How many artists would strap themselves to a ship’s mast just so they could paint a snowstorm? Not many, we’re assuming. But, Mr. Turner did. This film explores the last quarter century of the great if eccentric British painter J.M.W. Turner (Timothy Spall, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban). Profoundly affected by the death of his father, loved by a housekeeper he takes for granted and occasionally exploits sexually, he forms a close relationship with a seaside landlady with whom he eventually lives incognito in Chelsea, where he dies. FRIDAY, DEC. 25 Into the Woods You’re never too old for a good fairytale, and this one has all the makings of a great story. Disney has rolled some of our favorites fairytales—Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Jack & The Beanstalk, Rapunzel—into one to give us Into the Woods. Starring Meryl Streep, Johnny Depp, Anna Kendrick and Chris Pine, this musical follows the various characters on their adventures. Little do they know they’re also learning very important lessons from a sneaky, singing witch (Streep). The Interview Three words: Seth Rogen, James Franco and Kim Jong-un. Already t his is sounds like a brilliant comedy. Rogen and Franco reunite once again to play a producer and anchor for a celebrity TV show who snag an interview with North Korean leader Jong-un (not played by the real Jong-un for obvious reasons). However, there’s a catch: the CIA wants the men to assassinate the unpopular leader. The movie was pushed back from October to Christmas Day, which we don’t have a problem with whatsoever—can you think of a better gift? News of The Interview initially pissed off North Korea (understandably), and a foreign ministry spokesman for the country reportedly called the move “a blatant act of terrorism and war.” A movie that causes this much international controversy is, without a doubt, a must-see. Selma Finally, the Martin Luther King Jr. biopic we’ve been waiting for! Selma will have a limited release on Christmas Day but will expand on Jan. 9. Oprah Winfrey produced and stars in this film about the King’s campaign to secure equal voting rights in 1965. If you recall what you learned in U.S. History, the march from Selma to Montgomery resulted in President Johnson signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Selma screened at the AFI Fest, and critics from various outlets have called it stunning, emotional and intelligent, and it’s already getting Oscar buzz. *Ryan Bouziane contributed to this story. CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 15 FILM: FEATURE COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES Charlie Day as Dale, Jason Bateman as Nick and Jason Sudeikis as Kurt. THEY’RE BACK! ABOUT THREE YEARS AGO, Nick, Dale and Kurt were just three hapless heroes who were unhappy with their jobs. To escape their horrible bosses, they came up with a complicated plan: to kill them. However, it turns out that not everyone is cut for homicide, as the three men eventually realized. Thankfully, they decided to instead embark on different career paths. This leads us to Horrible Bosses 2, the sequel to the 2011 box office hit that grossed about $118 million domestically. In the latest installment, we’re reunited with Nick (Jason Bateman), Dale (Charlie Day) and Kurt (Jason Sudeikis) as they attempt to create a one-of-kind, albeit absurd, product: the “Shower Buddy,” an inshower device that dispenses soap, shampoo and water. They find a slick businessman (Christoph Waltz) to invest in the product, but he ends up stealing the guys’ idea and leaving them basically penniless. Naturally they’re upset, so the three come up with a terribly thought-out scheme to kidnap the investor’s obnoxious son (Chris Pine) to secure ransom money and stay in business. From then on, hilarious antics ensue as the three prove their kidnapping skills suck almost as much as their homicide skills when Pine’s character takes the upper hand. “We loved the idea of them concocting and then calling off a kidnapping plot, only to have the victim force them to go through with it,” explained director and co-writer Sean Anders (We’re the Millers, Dumb and Dumber To). Sequels are definitely the trend this year (case in point: 22 Jump Street, Dumb and Dumber To, The Expendables 3…need we go on?), but this movie isn’t your typical Part 2. “What’s tough about a lot of sequels,” explained Anders, “is that the first story takes the characters through some kind of transformation, where they begin as one kind of person and then change into a better, more enlightened person at the end. But Horrible Bosses wasn’t meant to be super heartwarming: it wasn’t that kind of party.” He added, “In fact, I think it’s safe to say that, at the end of the second movie, they still haven’t learned anything.” The film isn’t due out until the Thanksgiving holiday (Wednesday, Nov. 26), but it is already garnering solid reviews. The Hollywood Reporter notes, “Although not everyone will be giving thanks as this sequel lands on the upcoming holiday weekend, some will certainly seize on the film’s familiar casting and relatable situations as reason enough to celebrate.” 16 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 An inside look behind the familiar (and new!) faces of Horrible Bosses 2. BY CAMPUS CIRCLE STAFF Yes, Horrible Bosses 2’s hilarious characters are familiar to us, and with that familiarity comes a chemistry that radiates off screen: Bateman, Day and Sudeikis have the same undeniable energy we saw in the first film. “We can still surprise each other,” said Sudeikis. “Charlie, Jason and I become sort of a self-governing unit with a lot of check and balances.” Anders said the three “were on fire…Sometimes my job was to watch the fireworks go off and hone in on the best stuff, because there was so much of it.” In this trio, each character has their own role within the group. For example, Nick is the assumingly smart one with the voice of reason. “My job as Nick is to be as close as possible to a representative for the audience, and to react to the absurdity in these scenarios in enough of a realistic way so they don’t think it’s too goofy,” explained Bateman. Dale, on the other hand, is the stressed-out scary-cat who doesn’t want to do anything that will upset his wife. “[He] is all over the place, flipping out one moment and being ominously quiet the next,” said Anders. “He’s the most neurotic and easily frightened of the three…” Finally, there’s Kurt, the confident and optimistic one who believes everything will work out. He’s “happy-go-lucky, almost like a puppy dog. He likes to have fun, and he’s willing to go for it,” said Sudeikis. “He’s willing to try just about anything.” Also returning in the sequel is “Friends” star Jennifer Aniston, who reprises her role as Dale’s sex-addicted ex-supervisor Dr. Julia Harris, a dentist. Only now, Julia is in a sex-addiction group, trying to better herself…or is she? “She’s so unapologetic and confident and just insanely wrong in so many ways that it’s just so much fun to play,” Aniston told MTV News about her character. “She’s trying to help, supposedly, but it almost feels like she’s swimming in a sea of chum, trying to find her next group of victims.” In case you didn’t see the first film, Aniston showed off her wild side, and she delivers that same raunchiness in Horrible Bosses 2. “She was really up for anything, and so funny,” said Anders. “She came up with a lot of outrageous language that we worked into the dialogue. She really has a lot of fun with that character.” Aniston said she wasn’t intimidated working with the three funny-men and had more balls than the guys’ combined, as reported by Contactmusic. And in a separate interview, Aniston said that in her scenes with Bateman, her longtime friend, “we were trying to out-squirm each other, which was really fun. And Charlie is another one we like to squirm. Charlie is adorable. He’s game for anything, but he blushes easily.” But perhaps who delivered a slightly bigger surprise with his performance is Pine. We’re used to seeing the actor in more serious roles such as the smartass James T. Kirk in Star Trek and the badass Jack Ryan in Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit. Comedy is new to him. “My prescription was to stay loose, hang with the guys and follow the music of the scene,” said Pine. However, was he successful in keeping up with Bateman, Day and Sudeikis, three guys who are no strangers to comedy? “Let’s face it: Most, for lack of a better word, ‘pretty-boy’ actors don’t have the chops that a lot of comedy guys have,” said Anders in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “But every now and then a guy like Alec Baldwin or Jon Hamm comes along. I knew Chris was one of those guys.” And it seems that some critics agree: “Pine … introduces such manic humor that he manages to steal more than a few scenes,” writes Justin Lowe of the Hollywood Reporter. Unlike Pine, Jamie Foxx is a comedy vet with years and years of experience under his belt. He returns to the Horrible Bosses franchise as the scalp-tatted ex-con consultant (in the first movie, he advised the guys with their murder scheme). Now, the effortlessly funny Foxx is more of a “motivator.” “He’s trying to let them know that they don’t necessarily need his advice anymore, they just need to stop messing around,” explained Foxx. “They need to own and embrace the criminals that they are and get on with it.” With that said, will Kurt, Nate and Dale indeed “get on with it?” Will they finally pull off a crime, become their own bosses and rake in millions of dollars from Shower Buddy sales? Well, after you’ve finished eating your turkey, you’ll just have to check it out in theaters to find out. Horrible Bosses 2 releases in theaters on Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2014. *All direct quotes were taken from the Horrible Bosses 2 Warner Bros. press kit unless otherwise noted. Film | Music | Culture TV / FASHION THERE’S NOT A PERSON ON EARTH who can convince me that Mindy Kaling has zero style. Whether she’s on the red carpet or portraying the quirky and lovable Mindy Lahiri on FOX’s “The Mindy Project,” Mindy knows how to rock a variety of styles, embracing wonderful colors and her fabulous curves while still looking professional and sophisticated. INTERN FASHION TIPS INSPIRED BY MINDY KALING So, we’ve turned to her Instagram page to dig up some Mindy-inspired clothing items and outfits that BY SYDNEY CHAMPION would help any female intern stand out in an office environment. Mindy Kaling of “The Mindy Project.” EMILY SHUR/FOX Sure, Mindy might have the voice of a 10-year-old girl, but she dresses like a boss lady. The “Bright” Professional One of the best things about Mindy’s personal style is that she’s not afraid of color (she’s probably worn every single color of the rainbow on her show). Some interns prefer to dress in understated hues such as grey, black, dark blue and brown. However, that is a BIG mistake! Don’t be afraid to splash up the office environment with some color. It’ll make you stand out among the other interns, and if your boss has any fashion sense, you’ll most definitely receive a compliment. Copy Mindy’s love for color by investing in a bright blue blazer, like the one pictured here from Foreign Exchange. You can pair it with an equally bright skirt (like Mindy), or balance out your outfit with dark pants and a light-colored shirt underneath, like the model. Pictured: Classic Shirred Sleeve Blazer, $29, Foreign Exchange www.CampusCircle.com A Pencil Skirt that “Pops!” Every young female professional should have a least one of these in her closest. Furthermore, instead of the boring black, grey and pinstriped skirt, purchase a pencil skirt in a bold color such as purple, red, green or blue. This is probably my favorite look from Mindy thus far. She expertly paired her purple pencil skirt with a black-and-white long sleeved collared shirt and managed to not look “loud.” Although the Express model’s red pencil skirt is wonderfully bold and fitting, take this look a step further by matching your skirt with a patterned blouse. Or, try color blocking. The key to pencil skirts, however, is finding the right size. If you have a little bit of tummy flab (look, we can’t all have amazing abs), try finding a high-waist skirt that has a tummy panel. And be sure your pencil skirt isn’t too tight; if it’s too hard to walk around in it or if it creates unflattering bulges, don’t buy the skirt. And one more note about pencil skirt outfits in general: They’re great for accentuating curves, but don’t take it too far. Don’t wear a tight, button-up blouse that shows cleavage with your pencil skirt, and avoid skirts with slits that go all the way up to your mid-thigh area—that’s an intern fashion no-no. Pictured: High Yoke Waist Midi Pencil Skirt, $59.90, Express Baggage You Actually Need The bag you carry to class is probably not the bag you should be carrying to your internship. In other words, leave you ratty backpack that you’ve had since high school in your dorm, and invest in a nice workbag you’ll hold onto for years. Mindy’s Celine bag is to die for, and good for her. Chances are, if you’re interning, you’re either not getting paid or you’re getting paid very little, so the probability of you buying a Celine bag is nonexistent. Don’t feel too bad, though, because you can find an equally amazing bag at an affordable price. This tote bag from ASOS has leather-looking fabric (hey, who’s really going to tell the difference?) and enough pockets and zippers for you to fit your wallet, cell phone, lipgloss, etc. And, its size and shape allow you to carry documents back and forth if you need to, eliminating your need for a backpack or briefcase. However, what’s really great about this bag is its color. Emerald green gives off a sophisticated, royal vibe, and it will definitely stand out among all of the black and Navy blue purses in the office. If green isn’t your thing, at least get a bag in a color that draws attention. After all, as Mindy has proven us with ALL of her looks, embracing color is also embracing fierceness, confidence and creativity—three things every intern needs to stand out in the workplace. Pictured: ASOS East West Pocket Tote Bag, $53.22, ASOS CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 17 BEAUTY 5 BEST SPAS & SALONS ON THE WESTSIDE BY ANGELA MATANO The “Wet Room” at Burke Williams Day Spa LOS ANGELES’ WESTSIDE IS HOME TO WHAT FEELS LIKE A ZILLION PLACES TO PAMPER YOURSELF. Sometimes, with all the variety, it’s difficult to know which place to choose—especially when you’re a busy college student. For you UCLA students who need to de-stress from all of the late-night cramming, early classes and hardcore partying, here are fives spas and salons that amp up the amenities and give you more than you knew you wanted. Why not indulge? You deserve it! NOT YOUR ORDINARY SPA: Burke Williams Day Spa (Santa Monica) 800 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood 323.822.9007 burkewilliamsspa.com The pure professionalism of Burke Williams Day Spa envelops you at every turn. As its website states, “This is no ordinary day spa, but rather an indulgent oasis where you can escape the demands of every day life.” The royal treatment begins the second you step into the elevator and enter the reception room, which also serves as a sort of beauty boutique. Shed your clothes, and don your lush robe and slippers that are provided for your personal use. Burke Williams has tons of amenities, from showers and whirlpools to saunas and cool mist rooms—you could easily spend a whole day here! I decided to try the Nourishing Facial, a new, all-encompassing treatment that transforms skin by targeting any and all trouble areas. Tailored to fit your specific skin needs, this facial hydrates, cleans and exfoliates, and your facialist will even do extractions if you have unsightly blackheads. My aesthetician, Eden, carefully spent more than hour on my face and even massaged my feet and neck while I nearly fell asleep. For those with bigger skin issues, add-ons are available, including a skin brightener and a professional strength peel that makes everything penetrate deeper into your dermis. This really takes your complexion to the next level, leaving behind a glow that lasts for days, if not weeks. NAILED IT: Bellacures (Brentwood Village) 11712 Barrington Court, Los Angeles 310.295.0016 bellacures.com Luxurious. Serene. Meticulous. Bellacures takes nail care to a higher plain. Bellacures “believes in inner beauty but do what you can on the outside,” and this playful attitude makes this spa a fun and easygoing place to get your mani-pedi on. With quite a few locations to choose from (seven in Southern California, three on the Westside), this nail salon offers up a smorgasbord of choices, catering to all sorts, from men to kids and everyone in between. The Rock Star Gel manicure comes replete with glitter, and the Hold My Hand Manicure is both vegan and organic for those who like to get their beautification on while still maintaining their moral values. The shops have a clean, cozy vibe with comfortable armchairs to sit in and loads of magazines to page through. Overall, Bellacures is a fabulous place to come solo and chill, or you can bring a friend and chat. The pace is relaxed, and the staff is friendly and helpful. SKIN THERAPY 101: Dermalogica (Santa Monica) 1022 Montana Ave., Santa Monica 310.260.8682 dermalogica.com 18 CAMPUS CIRCLE November 20 - December 3, 2014 Dermalogica focuses on the science of your skin and how to bring out the best in your personal skin type. The shop in Santa Monica actually offers a free “face mapping,” a process that takes about 10 minutes and involves having a licensed Dermalogica skin therapist assess the entirety of your face and neck. The facialist can then suggest products and treatments to best suit your needs. This is genius for anyone confused about the large number of products out there with voluminous claims to better skin. Sometimes one great, targeted item can turn your problem right around. Beyond its fully stocked shop, Dermalogica also offers services in its very future-y pods. The skin therapists are well versed in facials and have a few specially targeted skin treatments for specific issues. The BioActive Peel is a skin resurfacing treatment all the way from Dermalogica’s “International Dermal Institute.” This peel basically removes you skin’s outer layers, taking with it troublesome acne, skin discoloration and premature signs of aging and leaving your skin looking fresher and brighter—who doesn’t want that? THE STAR TREATMENT: Bliss Los Angeles (Westwood) 930 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles 310.443.8228 blissworld.com If you’re looking for the full Kardashian experience, Bliss Spa in Westwood is your joint for absolute fabulosity. Inside the W Hotel, the star treatment can start with having your car valet, if you so desire. Just walking in the lobby can make you feel like a million bucks. The spa itself goes for all out glamour, and the details are astounding. From the chandeliers to the brownie bar, Bliss is intent on giving you just that: pure bliss. The amenities keep on coming with Haviana flip-flops, cucumber water and tons of magazines to read while you relax before your treatment or lounge in between beautifications. And the beautifications are plentiful. Bliss Spa lets you watch movies while you get your pedicure, take a shower using their signature products, relax in a glorious sauna or indulge in an aromatherapy steam shower. You could really hang out all day if you have the time and money. As for services, Bliss offers facials, massages, waxing and more. The spa serves up quite a few different body treatments, like the hot salt scrub that get rids of dead skin. They even have targeted body scrubs, like the “fatgirlslim” treatment, which specifically works on troublesome spots, toning and firming skin, perfect for those battling the Freshman 15. BEST BANG FOR YOUR BUCK: The Massage Place (Brentwood) 11740 San Vicente Blvd. #113, Los Angeles 310.442.1901 themassageplaces.com For those who like their bodywork down and dirty, The Massage Place keeps it simple and cheap. All of the masseuses I have encountered at these massage parlors have had a firm handle on the ways of sore muscles, bad backs and overall tension. Depending on your needs, the experience can be tailored to fit your desired amount of pressure versus simple relaxation. The therapists vary in their technique, from the soothing Swedish massage to the more intense deep tissue. This chain even offers such diverse alternatives such as a Thai massage, acupressure and reflexology—do read up and decide which is the best for you. The pricing at The Massage Place is truly remarkable. One-hour treatments are just $47 (don’t forget to tip your therapist!). The rooms are no nonsense but comfortable, and the “frou frou” amenities are kept to an absolute minimum. All in all, The Massage Place is a great spot to visit for those looking for a terrific deal. Film | Music | Culture campus to concert hall all access pass Enjoy 11 concerts with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra for only $30!* Jeffrey Kahane Music Director The All Access Pass includes: all 7 orchestral series concerts @ Alex Theatre or Royce Hall sep 20/21 beethoven 5 oct 18/19 mozart serenade nov 15/16 beethoven concerto no. 3 jan 24/25 vivaldi & schubert mar 14/15 mozart & prokofiev apr 18/19 mozart jupiter may 16/17 mendelssohn italian discover mozart’s requiem @ Ambassador Auditorium feb 19 with LA Master Chorale all 3 westside connections concerts @ the Moss Theater feb 5 with Frank Gehry mar 19 with Frederick Fisher apr 30 with Christopher Hawthorne two ways to purchase: call 213 622 7001 x 1 or visit laco.org/college Advance reservation privileges and option to reserve up to 3 additional tickets at $12* making great music personal LAChamberOrchestra *valid college ID required photo Michael Burke @LACOtweets
© Copyright 2024