Category: Entertainment

  • Can Twitter Predict 2014’s X Factor Winner?

    The last couple of years we’ve put together a science based (not really) system that will almost accurately predict the winner of X Factor, it’s called TWATS (Twitter Winning And Theoretical Service)

    Based on the fanbases of the contestants (their twitter following) we have almost accurately predict the top 4 of each of the series.

    In 2012, we predicted that Union J, Lucy Spraggan, Ella Henderson and James McArthur would be victorious – that instance, James McArthur won and Ella Henderson came 6th Union J came 4th. Lucy Spraggan left the competition due to sickness.

    In 2013 the top 4 in the TWATS were Sam Callahan, Nicholas McDonald, Kingsland Road and Tamera Foster. In the end Sam Bailey came first Nicholas McDonald came second, Luke Friend and Rough Copy came 4th. Tamera came 5th and Sam came 7th.

    So judging on this year’s numbers:

     

    Jack Walton 148K

    Stereo Kicks 148K

    Andrea Faustini 147K

    Lauren Platt 132K

    Paul Akister 105K

    Ben Haenow 122K

    Jay James 101K

    Fleur East 68.6K

    Lola Saunders 62.7K

    Stevi Ritchie 43.7K

    So what do you think?

     

    X Factor continues tonight at 8:00PM on ITV 1

     

  • Simon Cowell asks Rylan if he likes the BACKDOOR

    Simon Cowell asks Rylan if he likes the BACKDOOR

    It was one of those totally awkward TV moments. Yes, that moment when one  straight man makes a joke about the “backdoor” with a gay man.

     

    Simon Cowell
    ©Thames / Syco

     

    Major AWKS.
    During a segment where judges had to pick a front door from the ones presented on the screen in front of them, Rylan quipped, “I love a front door” to which Simon responded, “I thought you liked back doors?”

    simon-cowell-gay-gaff-x-factor

    The other judges looked shocked and Nicole started to wave her hands in Simon’s face.

    Rylan retorted by sashaying over to Simon, sitting on the side of Simon’s desk saying,

    “Oh, Simon! Would you like me to show you how much?”

    Simon Cowell gay joke
    CREDIT: ITV

     

    Simon was left red-faced after realising that his joke was in poor taste and after Rylan suggested that he show the judge how much he liked the “backdoor”.

    Instantly Simon knew he had taken the joke too far and apologised immediately.

    The head judge said, ”I apologise. I shouldn’t have said that – sorry, sorry, sorry.”

     


    ALSO READ: Wait did X Factor accidentally show Simon Cowell’s penis?

    ALSO READ: Which X Factor star has been hiding this smoking hot body?


     

    This year’s X Factor has been dogged with homophobic responses from its at-home audience. When Louis Walsh chose Bratavio for his category, his sexuality was called into question by fans of the show and both Bradley Hunt and Ottavio Columbro, Bratavio’s members, were both homophobically abused and even sent death threats over social media.

  • Bruno’s flirting continues with Greg’s BUTT OF MARBLE

    Bruno’s flirting continues with Greg’s BUTT OF MARBLE

    Greg Rutherford’s bum was once again up for debate in last night’s episode of Strictly as judge Bruno Tonioli said he couldn’t take his eyes off it.

    Greg Rutherford Bum
    (C) BBC – Photographer: Guy Levy

    Greg Rutherford‘s bum has become a national talking point and it all started last week when his bottom became the subject of a both criticism and praise for being so muscly.

    The show’s host, Tess Daly, even joked that the women next to her were saying “nice bum” whilst Greg was whirling around the dance floor with his partner Natalie Lowe.

    After last week’s discussion about Greg’s toosh, the theme continued when Judge Len Goodman took the opportunity to tell the Olympian that his “bum was going to town”.

    But it was the openly gay judge Bruno who ramped up the flirting, shouting,

    “Keep going tiger… oooh Hurricane Greg.

    “ooh, you are an animal with a butt of marble.”

    With his eyes rolled to the ceiling, Bruno revealed he simply couldn’t take his eyes off Greg’s perky assets. “I don’t know why!” he quipped.

    The flirting all started when Greg rather coyly gave Bruno his candy floss.

    Which clearly made the judge’s day.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Shopping and F*cking

    ★ | Shopping and F***ing

    What’s not to like about shopping and f***ing? They’re two fine occupations. The answer is a that there’s a hell of a lot not to like in this messy and deeply flawed adaptation of Mark Ravenhill’s 1996 play. This is a world where sex and consumerism are distinctly unfunny, painfully dull and are a chore to watch.

    The play concerns Mark, a heroin addict who’s just failed in rehab, his lover Robbie and their flatmate Lulu. Emotionally deadened and reduced to seeing everything through a lens of consumerism, they’ve lost the ability to connect emotionally. Cue the arrival of Gary, a teenage rent boy who’s the victim of sexual abuse and now wants to be owned and a messy situation with a drug dealer. Events only serve to deepen their jaded worldview.

    Thematically the play has become more, rather than less relevant in the 20 years since it was first staged at The Royal Court. The world feels more mechanical and glassy eyed with the rise in the usage of the Internet. The play should work as well as it did when it was first written. The problem here is that director Sean Holmes’ attempts at a clever staging have swamped the play to such a degree that it’s almost unwatchable and the script feels buried beneath a high sheen.

    The Lyric has been transformed into a TV studio with a change in seating, green screens and cameras. It’s like a 90’s late night crap TV show with bouncy fake enthusiasm crossed with a surreal shopping channel. Runners appear, there are interludes where the cast try to sell tat to the audience and breaks for shameless nostalgia fests with 90’s pop music, one where Robbie gets off his face on E. It feels sloppy and cheap and not in any intentional way. Back projections of porn, scenes of rimming with associated anal bleeding, characters vomiting on stage, karaoke, audience participation, nudity, on-stage sex, drug-use, splatters of body fluid: I’d list more of the multitude of things that this production has thrown clumsily on stage but I’m starting to get flashbacks of boredom.

    It feels sloppy and cheap and not in any intentional way. Back projections of porn, scenes of rimming with associated anal bleeding, characters vomiting on stage, karaoke, audience participation, nudity, on-stage sex, drug-use, splatters of body fluid: I’d list more of the multitude of things that this production has thrown clumsily on stage but I’m starting to get flashbacks of boredom.

    This could have worked and could have been an arch and witty adaptation that slammed home the message of the play and emphasised the caustic wit of the piece. Instead, it just feels juvenile and tiresome with nothing to compel you to watch. It’s about as dull as spending an hour and a half listening to Gary Barlow’s monotone voice (if you hadn’t noticed, the characters are named after Take That).

    Really disappointing work from The Lyric.

    Shopping and F*cking plays at The Lyric until the 5th November

    Follow Chris Bridges on Twitter

  • TV | Red Dwarf XI Episode 4: Officer Rimmer

    TV | Red Dwarf XI Episode 4: Officer Rimmer

    One moment there is no Chris Barrie on our screens for years next thing you know more than a hundred come along at once …

    ★★★★★

    Red Dwarf XI / DAVE TV
    Red Dwarf XI / DAVE TV

    This week’s Red Dwarf sees a return to the classic Arnold Rimmer (Chris Barrie) has illusions of grandeur setting of old. Though this time it’s no illusion as Rimmer finally receives the promotion he has waited for all his life and death. Obviously the rest of the Dwarf Posse are less than happy with this.
    An attempt to reign in the power crazy Hologram only makes the situation worse as Rimmer decides on creating a few hundred clones of himself certain that they will obey him if no-one else will.
    Sure they will, Arn, sure they will …

    Red Dwarf XI / DAVE TV
    Red Dwarf XI / DAVE TV

    A very different but no less special episode if only for the treat of seeing Chris Barrie do what he does best: playing multiple characters at once. The fact that he manages to act as the same character in at-least twenty different ways is testament to his talent. He is an extremely talented man and it’s a shame he isn’t on our screens more often.
    Red Dwarf XI every Thursday at 9PM on Dave

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Cats – Sheffield Lyceum and National Tour

    ★★★ |Cats

    Based on the poems of T.S. Elliot, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s seminal, record breaking musical tells the tale of the gathering of a tribe of cats for their annual “Jellicle Ball”, where they come together to celebrate who they are, and to be chosen by Old Deuteronomy to be the Jellicle Choice to be reborn. Exploding onto the stage in an abundance of colour, choreography and energy and featuring the songs Memory and Magical Mister Mistoffelees, Cats tells of the joys of being a feline and of being an individual.

    Photo Credit – Alessandro Pinna

     

     

    Cats production is impressive. There is no denying that the make-up and costumes are stunning, albeit the leotards are so tight it is not difficult to see which cats have been neutered. The set, based around a rubbish dump, is static and effective, as it spills out of the stage and into the auditorium, littering the edge of the proscenium arch and the aisles leading into the audience. The sound was crisp, clear and pitched at the perfect volume, with a good balance of orchestra and vocals, allowing for the actors clear diction to be heard with ease. The lighting was well thought out and the whole thing was professionally put together.

    In terms of performances, they were broadly difficult to fault. Featuring a cast of around 30 very talented actors and dancers, there were some inspired pieces of choreography, both in terms of the feline movement employed by the actors and the show-stopping ensemble pieces which were brilliant at times. The show, despite being first performed in 1981, didn’t feel dated at all, and had an air of freshness about it – it has certainly stood the test of time better than some of Lloyd-Webber’s other musicals from that era.

    However, as a show, Cats is a curious beast and even now, I am still not really sure what to make of it. Oddly, and despite its success, it was never a show which really appealed to me. Audiences have lapped up this show for the best part of 35 years, so I was keen to see what has carried this show for so long. There were a few issues with the uneven pacing of the piece throughout; although the second act fared much better than the first. Some of the lyrics and choreography were slightly repetitive and overused and the whole thing felt very surreal indeed. But once you had bought into the premise and suspended your disbelief, the show did hit some highs, and it became clear why Cats has been embraced by the theatre going public. On paper, the show really shouldn’t work; but in reality, it turned out to be nonsense, but really quite fun. Tap dancing cockroaches, cats dressed as dogs and acrobatics aplenty all fed into the slightly odd but absorbing spectacle.

    Despite its surreal quality, Cats turned out to be far more enjoyable than I could have anticipated. It did feel, as I left the theatre, like someone had force fed me cheese and heavily sedated me for two and half hours; but ultimately – and surprisingly for me, it won me over and did leave me feline good.

    Cats is currently at Sheffield Theatres (www.sheffieldtheatres.co.uk) until 15th October 2016 before rounding off its national tour at Milton Keynes and Wimbledon, before heading to Hungary, Dubai and Germany. For details visit www.catsthemusical.com/tour/

     

  • Coming Out On Film

    Coming Out On Film

    It’s National Coming Out Day and we have found a couple of new films to celebrate.

    (c) The G-Word
    (c) The G-Word

     

    The first, The G-Word, is a two and a half minute short comedy looking at the difficulty there can be in coming-out to the parents and unexpected consequences that can arise from it. Written and performed by Carl Loughlin, this is certainly a short that has potential to be made into a running web series.

    The second feature film, Coming Out by a young NYC film maker Alden Peters, documents his own coming-out experiences as he captures the full conversations with friends, family and society. This often private moment in a person’s life is laid bare to show the various reactions from the painfully awkward to the hilariously honest. Out now on DVD and VOD.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Confessional

    THEATRE REVIEW | Confessional

    ★★ | Confessional

    CREDIT: Simon_Annand
    CREDIT: Simon_Annand

    If a play is ‘rarely performed’ or ‘an undiscovered gem’ then be wary. There’s often a good reason for that: it’s usually because it’s not a very good play. “Confessional” was an early draft of Tennessee Williams’ later 1972 play “Small Craft Warnings” and is a sprawling elegiac piece laden with dramatic speeches. It concerns a group of low life characters in a bar in a grotty seaside town. Its main point of interest is for scholars and connoisseurs of his work in that this is the first of Williams’ plays where he felt able to include openly gay characters.

    The bar is populated by the usual suspects that mark Williams’ later works: a drunken and angry woman, a swaggering stud who has a name for his penis, an alcoholic doctor and a washed up older gay man with a boy who’s he picked up at the roadside. They rant, cry, shout and ramble. It’s beautiful in parts and there are poetic moments but on the whole it feels a bit of a mess.

    Director Jack Silver has transposed the action from 1950s American to a pub in Southend in the present day with mixed results. The theatre has been transformed into a pub with the audience dotted around at tables and on banquettes with the actors roaming amongst them. Justin Williams’ set is pitch perfect. This is a pub that you’d probably walk in and walk out of again in a hurry. Sticky looking tables, beer and a burger offers and a sense of dilapidation: it’s a pub we’ve probably all been in and wished we hadn’t. The characters fit in well and you can imagine a pub like this being stalked by enraged beautician Leona yelling at her good for nothing going to seed Chav man Bill and her promiscuous weeping friend Violet.

    Where the concept flounders is the language. Characters talk in a style befitting of 1950s Southern California and use old-fashioned America language that doesn’t translate well to the present day. The Jukebox has mournful violin music that Leona plays on repeat. There’s something distinctly dated about their attitudes and stances too/ It often feels jarring and stylistically wrong.

    The play is still worth seeing for three reasons: the concept, the set and the acting. The cast are universally strong and there’s something magnetic about Lizzie Stanton and Gavin Brocker (and I don’t just mean his too tight clothing or references to his cock which he has named ‘Junior’). The set is a witty and authentic interpretation. The third factor is the concept of the actors having free range. There’s a script and a set and actors. The rest is the actors’ choice on the night. They stand where they want, cry or don’t cry and choose just how dark or how funny the play is on any given night. Surprisingly, this works and there’s a strong chemistry that comes across with a naturalistic feel to the piece in spite of the incongruous language. That’s quite a feat given such lacklustre raw material.

     

    Confessional plays at the Southwark Playhouse until the 29th October

  • What Charlie Hunnam is looking like today is crazy

    What Charlie Hunnam is looking like today is crazy

    So do you remember Charlie Hunnam?

    CREDIT: Channel 4

     

    He probably has the most famous butt in all of the UK, thanks to a groundbreaking sex scene, never before seen on British televisions.

    The 36-year-old first smashed his way onto our screens in 1999 in the UK version of Queer As Folk as the adorable Nathan Maloney, when he was just 19. Although he played a much younger character.

     

    Embed from Getty Images

    Embed from Getty Images

    Well he’s done a lot of growing up and his acting CV is quite staggering, he’s turned into a true Hollywood Hunk. He currently has 2 films in post production and two in pre-production. He starred in Sons of Anarchy from 2008 until 2014. He also starred in Pacific Rim in 2013, which was a huge box office smash.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Embed from Getty Images

    Embed from Getty Images

    Want to relive 1999? Buy the Queer As Folk DVD

     

     

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  • Are you planning something BIG and LIFE AFFIRMING?

    So the BBC is looking for some people who are heading towards a life changing week and they want you to share your experience with them.

    Sponsored by

     

    So… are you?

    Going to tell your family you’re gay

     

    Perhaps you’re going to tell your boss that you’re going to start your DRAG career

     

    Maybe you need to tell your friends something

     

    Maybe you’re going to start living as your true identity

     

    Maybe your gonna start a family with your boyfriend!

     

    Maybe you’re going to go on your very first date

    CREDIT: Oneinchpunch-bigstock
    CREDIT: Oneinchpunch-bigstock

     

    Maybe you’re going to meet your Internet boyfriend in REAL LIFE!

     

    So if you fancy being part of this groundbreaking documentary why not give the MY BIG WEEK team a call or an email.

    The BBC is making a new BBC2 series which will consist of 6 hour-long episodes that will go out next year at the 9pm time slot. Each episode will follow members of the public of all ages in an observational documentary style as they go through a week of change. We are interested in lots of different ideas for what is making that week extraordinary with life’s milestones being the running theme. They will also have access to support and advice from people across the world during the week. As a BBC2 production it will have a warm, life affirming tone with the human interest story at the centre.

    We would love to hear from anyone who would be interested in talking to us about the series, by expressing interest there is no obligation to take part and all calls will be treated as confidential.

    To get in touch email mybigweek@bbc.co.uk or call 07834 624 111

    my-big-week_lgbt-general

    This article was sponsored by BBC Two, but created by THEGAYUK.

  • Tamal’s mum think he’s got a FAT bum!

    Baking hero Tamal Ray has been told by his mum that he’s got a FAT BUM!

    CREDIT: BBC Love Productions:Mark Bourdillon

     

    Yes you heard that right. Baking hero Tamal Ray has been told by his Mum that he’s got a fat bum.

    Taking to Twitter he said how his mum had been asking whether wearing tight shorts was a fashion statement or whether it was that his bum was getting fat!

    Well, Twitter went into a meltdown after his fans realised he was wearing shorts and well talking about his bum!

    He also had some consolation when fans shared their own experiences of their mothers’ charming statements.

    https://twitter.com/heidistephens/status/784335376622071809

     


    ALSO READ: We’ve got a candy crush on Bake Off’s Andrew