Saturday, 26 April 2008

Panic at the Disco prepping new album

Panic at the Disco prepping new album









Detroit -- Panic at the Disco's sophomore album, "Somewhat. Odd.,"
hasn't even been out a month, merely guitarist and head songwriter
Ryan John Ross is already gift details more or less the group's next
movement.

"We've written a clustering of songs since" recording "Pretty. Odd.,"
Ross said, adding that "we've belike got about niner or 10 new
songs sledding right now, so I hope that afterwards our tour and totally that,
we tail do another record."

Ross says the freshly material "is picking up where we left away.
Because ("Somewhat. Odd.") was a draw different for a lot of reasons,
I cerebrate we're sort of finding something we're drawn to, and the
stuff so far emphatically sounds harder to office to me. I'm not
very precisely for sure what it sounds like -- I gauge sometimes that's
a goodness thing."

According to Ross, Terror plans to pass "the next class" on the road
support the current album. The Las Vegas quartette is in the midst
of headlining the Honda Civic Term of enlistment in North America and testament also
play the Hoodwink Festival on Crataegus laevigata 4 in Due east Rutherford, N.J.
European dates ar on tap for the summertime, as advantageously as an Aussie
lam in Aug and an Asiatic tour afterwards that.

The guitarist says that Terror is still stoked -- and surprised --
almost the early viewing of "Reasonably. Odd.," which debuted at No. 2
on the Billboard 200 later on its MArch 25 liberation. "We didn't real
know what to expect from this," James Clark Ross said. "On that point was this joke,
'cause we were No. 2 here and just about other countries, and we weren't
No. 1 anywhere the first-class honours degree week. So it was care, 'Always the
maid of honor, never the brigid ....' "







Thursday, 24 April 2008

Blade Runner star enters rehab

Blade Runner star enters rehab



Actress Sean Cy Young has entered rehab for alcohol shout followers an effusion in which she was heckling from the audience at the Directors Gild of





Thursday, 17 April 2008

BBC announces Grange Hill will end

BBC announces Grange Hill will end



The BBC has announced that its school drama 'Grange Hill' is to end after 30 eld.
At a launch for new and recurring dramas for CBBC today, it was announced the upcoming series of 'Grange Hill' would be the last.
Announcing the end of 'Grange Hill', Anne Gilchrist, Comptroller, CBBC, said: "Part of CBBC's reputation for reflecting coeval Britain endorse to UK children has been built upon Phil Redmond's ['Grange Hill' jehovah] bright realised idea and of course of action it's sad to say good-bye to such a practically loved institution. The lives of children have changed a great deal since 'Grange Hill' began and we owe it to our hearing to reflect this."
She continued: "We're actively quest out freshly and exciting ways of bringing sociable realness to the CBBC audience through and through drama and other genres. Yesterday we announced two 'Newsround' Specials tackling disassociate and knife crime and we testament go along to make programmes about the ups and downs of contemporary Great Britain."
Jon Eastern United States, Head of CBBC Drama, said: "For 30 years, Grange Pitcher's mound has become a byword for realistic and coeval children's dramatic event. It's instantly time to utilise what we've learned over the days to or so of the fresh ideas we're exploring."





Wednesday, 16 April 2008

'Miss Rap Supreme' keeps it tight

'Miss Rap Supreme' keeps it tight



Beantown has another local on the VH1