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Month: May 2015

Penn, of Penn & Teller, wins ‘Celebrity Jeopardy’ pot for Opportunity Village

Penn, of Penn & Teller, wins ‘Celebrity Jeopardy’ pot for Opportunity Village

 By Kimberly Laux for Las Vegas Review-Journal 

Magician, comedian and Las Vegas headliner Penn Jillette won Friday’s celebrity episode of “Jeopardy” to bring $50,000 to a local charity.

“Celebrity Jeopardy, I hope height counts for something on this damn show,” Jillette, the talkative half of the world-famous magic duo Penn & Teller, tweeted Thursday afternoon.

Although he flubbed the Final Jeopardy question about celebrity memoirs, Jillette had the most money going into the last round and finished the game with $13,800.

“Yes! You call that applause? Come on!” he shouted jokingly to the audience.

The comedian’s $50,000 in winnings will be donated to Opportunity Village, Nevada’s largest charity, which provides services and training to disabled people.

Jillette’s two celebrity opponents on the show were fashion designer Cynthia Rowley, who came in second place with $3,300, and TV and movie actor Zachary Quinto, who bet all of his $11,400 in the Final Jeopardy round and finished with $0. Rowley won $10,000 to be split between Public Art Fund in New York and The Feed Foundation. Quinto won $10,000 for Direct Relief.

Jillette tweeted Thursday night about his post-weight-loss appearance on the trivia show, “Yup, I’m going to look a LOT thinner on Jeopardy tomorrow than some of you have seen me. But, I’m healthier than I’ve ever been. Thanks.”

Contact Kimber Laux at klaux@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0381. Find her on Twitter: @lauxkimber.

Meet the Magician who Performs for Millionaires

Meet the Magician who Performs for Millionaires

Steve Cohen has been performing magic shows at New York’s Waldorf Astoria hotel for the past 15 years. As the in-house spell conjurer at one of the world’s most iconic hotels, he’s been dubbed the “Millionaires’ Magician.” Watch the video on the NYP site. I tried posting it here, but couldn’t disable autoplay.. and I HATE autoplay.. Watch it at:

http://nypost.com/video/meet-the-magician-who-performs-for-millionaires/

RIP.. BB King

RIP.. BB King

 BB King was the king – King of the Blues. No one in our lifetime influenced the soul wrenching sound from the cotton fields of the deep south like B B King.   

“A singer and guitarist born into a sharecropping family on September 16, 1925, in Itta Bena, Mississippi, Riley B. King… the famous guitar slinger known as B.B. King, became one of the best-known blues performers and a primary model for rock guitarists in the music industry.  All of this was happily followed after his service in the U.S. Army. When BB was young he played on street corners for dimes and would sometimes play in as many as four towns a night. In 1947 he hitchhiked to Memphis, Tennessee to continue his music career. He stayed with his cousin Bukka White, one of them most celebrated blues performers of his time, and she helped him find his way in the city’s music circle. Soon he was known as “the Beale Street Blues Boy.”B.B. King made his first recording in 1949, and the very next year began a 12-year-long association with Kent/RPM/Modern, which he then recorded a string of rhythm and blues hits. 

His first national hit was “Three O’clock Blues,” which reached No.1 on the R&B charts. He toured the night club circuit and averaged more than 300 shows annually for over 30 years, and has released over 50 albums. His style of music earned him the title “King of the Blues.” His famous guitar was named “Lucille” after two guys fighting over a girl named Lucille knocked over a barrel lit with kerosene in the middle of the dance floor at a dance twist he was attending. The place caught fire, but that didn’t stop him from running back inside after he realized he had forgotten to grab his beloved guitar.In 1962, King signed with ABC records, which released Live at the Regal, a benchmark blues concert album. In 1969, he released his biggest hit single, “The Thrill is Gone.” The first bluesman to tour the Soviet Union in 1979, by this time he had also become the first bluesman to enter the pop mainstream, making regular appearances in Las Vegas, Nevada and on network television. In 1987, BB was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He played more than 250 concerts per year and well into his 70’s. In his 80’s the number of tour dates were of course limited in number; being his health was deteriorating over the past few years. Even well into old age B.B. King will forever be one of the greatest, most influential blues guitar stylists, composers, and singers of the 20th century.”   http://deepjams.net/b-b-king-blues-royalty/

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CONJUROR ON THE RIVER KWAI: How Britain’s oldest magician performed his greatest trick – surviving as a Japanese PoW

CONJUROR ON THE RIVER KWAI: How Britain’s oldest magician performed his greatest trick – surviving as a Japanese PoW

Not many soldiers who fought throughout World War II are still alive. But one group in particular have almost gone now – the men who fought in the Pacific and were captured by the Japanese.

So to have a brand-new memoir from a man who endured the atrocities of the infamous Burma ‘Death Railway’ feels almost like an illusion – rather like the conjuring tricks which, as this astonishing book shows, diverted the Japanese and helped keep Fergus Anckorn alive.

Left for dead in a storm drain in Singapore, one of few survivors of a hospital massacre in which hundreds died, his sheer existence is a miracle. Yet here he is – still sturdy, bright-eyed and cracking jokes at 93, his story made public only because he happened to sit at dinner next to a writer, Peter Fyans, who realised what a tale Anckorn had to tell.

Yes, Fergus was lucky – but he also made his luck. He was shrewd, wiry, determined and quick-witted, all qualities which he would have to call upon.

Yet what saved him was his sleight of hand…  Read more..

(Be sure to watch the BBC2 

22 May 2015 ) 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/books/article-2085849/CONJUROR-ON-THE-RIVER-KWAI-How-Britains-oldest-magician-performed-greatest-trick–surviving-Japanese-PoW-CAPTIVITY-SLAVERY-AND-SURVIVAL-AS-A-FAR-EAST-POW-BY-PETER-FYANS-Pen–Sword-19-99.html