Posts Tagged ‘ashton kutcher’

Hollywood stars help prevent suicide after Twitter alert

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Hollywood stars help prevent suicide after Twitter alert

Hollywood actresses Demi Moore and Nia Vardalos, star of my big Fat Greek Wedding, helped police on Friday thwart a possible suicide attempt after being alerted to it through Twitter.

Moore and Vardalos were instrumental in rushing police to the home of an 18-year-old. The suicidal man, wrote a message addressed to Moores Twitter account saying he was about to go hang myself from a tree outside my house and end my life. Moore, who is married to actor Ashton Kutcher and goes by @mrskutcher on Twitter, wrote the man back asking if he needed help. Vardalos, who saw the exchange on Moores public Twitter feed, called a suicide prevention centre in Los Angeles, which contacted the Seminole County Sheriffs Office. The police officer said the man admitted posting the suicide threats on Twitter and that he did not know what he would do to himself without help. he was placed in protective custody. Moore posted a message on her Twitter account on Friday saying, Thank you Twitterverse for your help supporting someone in pain last night. it was the second time in less than a year that Moore was involved in preventing a possible suicide. afp

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Corey Haim Remembered In Today's Twitter-Wood » MTV Movies Blog

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Corey Haim meant a lot things to the posters in Twitter-Wood, and his unexpected death this morning triggered an outpouring of rememberances. Ashton Kutcher called him a “childhood hero,” Alyssa Milano said he was a “sweet boy,” and numerous other noted their favorite Haim films, from “The Lost Boys” and “Lucas” to “License to Drive” and “Dream a Little Dream.”

Whether they remembered him as a someone they watched before coming to Hollywood or as a fellow actor whose career spanned decades, Haim got a lot of love from the Twitter community today. “The Lost Boys” will outdo “Twilight” every time on my all-time favorite vampire films lists, and Haim will remain there along with it. Check out what everyone had to say after the jump, and feel free to share your own memories in the comments.

@aplusk Rip Corey Haim “Childhood hero”
-Ashton Kutcher, Actor (“Spread,” “The Butterfly Effect”)

@ThatKevinSmith Lost Boy goes home: Corey Haim, dead at 38. tinyurl.com/dreamalittledreamforever G’bye, LUCAS. you gave hope to the weird & unlikely.
-Kevin Smith, Writer/Director/Actor (“Cop Out,” “Jay & silent Bob Strike Back”)

@1capplegate my thoughts go out to Corey’s family and friends today. so sad.
-Christina Applegate, Actress (“The Rocker,” “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel”)

@darren_bousman RIP Corey-Dream a Little Dream, License to Drive, Lucas, Lost Boys. you gave us some great films. yes, I consider Dream a Little Dream great
-Darren Lynn Bousman, Director (“Saw IV,” “Mother’s Day”)

@ralphmacchio always so sad and disturbing when the addiction and demons prevail. RIP Corey Haim.
-Ralph Macchio, Actor (“The Karate Kid,” “My Cousin Vinny”)

@Alyssa_Milano Just woke up to the sad, sad news that Corey Haim passed away. RIP sweet boy.
-Alyssa Milano, Actress (“Castle,” “Commando”)

@MelissaEGilbert Corey Corey Corey. you will be missed. may those who love you find peace knowing that there is no more torture for you…no more pain.
-Melissa Gilbert, Actress (“”Little House on the Prairie,” “Heart of the Storm”)

@TheJoeLynch so utterly bummed about Corey Haim.terrible,sad news.Thankfully,like those pesky Santa Carla vamps,he’ll live forever in Film. #RIPCorey
-Joe Lynch, Actor/Director (“Terror Firmer,” “Wrong Turn 2: Dead End”)

@mshowalter Damn. RIP Corey.
-Michael Showalter, Actor/Writer (”Signs,” “Wet Hot American Summer”)

Don’t forget to follow @MTVMoviesBlog on Twitter for all the latest updates and colorful commentary from the world of movies.

White House Using Twitter to Spread Message

Monday, March 8th, 2010

WASHINGTON — Blending behind-the-scenes nuggets with a defense of President Barack Obama’s record, White House and administration officials increasingly are communicating through Twitter.

The popular social network is operating as a Web-based clearinghouse for public statements on weighty subjects (the federal budget) and the mundane (personal grocery lists). It’s similar to a bulletin board where anyone can post short notes and users cull the pieces they see by choosing to “follow” individuals’ account.

Forget press releases. White House press secretary Gibbs and his deputy, bill Burton, are now sharing news in Twitter messages. so far 33,000 people have signed up to follow Gibbs and more than 6,000 are tracking Burton. those two officials have a ways to go to catch actor Ashton Kutcher and his 4.6 million followers.

“Wow unreal game… POTUS watched OT in his office right off the Oval Office — all of us are so proud of our great team,” Gibbs tweeted during the men’s Olympic hockey finals last Sunday, when the Americans lost the gold medal game to Canada in overtime. POTUS is the acronym for president of the United States.

These are hardly the stodgy pronouncements one expects from the president’s top spokesmen. but as Obama’s team continues an online strategy set in place during the campaign and imported to the White House, it seems only natural that they would make it a piece of a broader communications plan that extends across the government.

U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice tweets about diplomacy, Assistant Secretary of State Arturo Valenzuela tweets about the Western Hemisphere and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke tweets about trade.

“Welcome back, furloughed DOTers!” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood tweeted recently to his employees.

With a news cycle now measured in seconds rather than days, administration officials recognize they must embrace this rapid pace and use the same tactics as the critics who assail them and the reporters who cover them. Gibbs, who is Obama’s chief defender, has signaled that the White House won’t cede any ground online.

Twitter began four years ago as a ubiquitous microblogging site to follow the activities of celebrities such as Lance Armstrong, the bicycling champion whose account was the first one Gibbs followed.

Since then, it has proved to be a powerful tool for mobilizing causes and protest movements by allowing people to use common phrases to link subjects by theme. in Washington, that translates into hashtags — key words preceded by the symbol for a pound sign, such as #whitehouse — that users key in to find connected nuggets.

“There’s a whole language, obviously, and typing with numbers and symbols that has evaded me,” Gibbs said. “I’m sure my son could teach me that far better than I could pick it up.”

Twitter also lets users communicate directly with each other, either through public messages using (at) symbols or through private messages. in many ways, it can be used as an e-mail system in which messages are completely public but limited to just 140 letters, numbers or symbols.

Obama’s aides are fast students of Twitter’s etiquette and uses. the White House announced Obama’s first news conference on Twitter last year. Burton has been known to clarify Gibbs’ comments while Gibbs is still speaking from the White House podium. Officials share with their followers news reports the White House views as positive.

Burton explained — in a tweet, no less — the approach.

“@PressSec is using this new medium in a way that gets information out quickly and effectively tracks what is on the minds of our press corps,” he responded to a tweet from this reporter, PElliottAP.

Obama’s campaign team built an Internet-based direct engagement model to win the White House and adapted the plan once in Washington. At the Democratic National Committee, aides continue to update the political BarackObama account, which operates separately from the White House tweets. those are treated as formal communications and will be filed away as part of the presidential archive along with legal memos and policy documents.

In tandem with their quick bursts of information on Twitter, the online White House routinely turns to its blog, Facebook page or YouTube channel where Obama now posts his weekly address.

“All of these things are basically entirely new to government, but have become a standard part of White House operations, with top White House officials recognizing their value and placing them as top priorities, giving the public equal footing in a world where, for most of history, government has had to engage and communicate with them through the press or interest groups,” White House spokesman Nick Shapiro said.

For instance, 60,000 people went to the White House Web site last fall to watch Obama speak to a joint session of Congress on health care, and one-third of them stayed on the site after it was over to talk with administration officials about the speech.

Macon Phillips, the White House new media director who tweets as macon44, said the online chat allowed officials to get “a taste of what questions the actual public had in raw form — rather than simply the questions cable news and Beltway pundits have.”

Oscar Friday: The Academy Awards, social networks, Twitter and ratings

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Oscar Friday: the Academy Awards, social networks, Twitter and ratingsAlso: the Oscars, Oscar awards, Twitter oscar awards, academy awards twitter

If the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) had a New Media Division, one initiative should be something called “Oscar Friday”. It’s like Follow Friday on Twitter, where in that case it’s a day, today, that Twitter users are encouraged to follow other Twitter users.

On Oscar Friday, Twitter users flying the hashtag #OscarFriday or #OF are encouraged to follow others who have the use that same hashtag or are recommending following other Twitter users under the #OscarFriday hastag. the idea is to have a kind of ring of connected Oscar followers that could better propagate an Oscar-related tweet.

Moreover, AMPAS could use its Twitter account to ignite the effort. that would mean stars like, if they were so encouraged to do so, Ashton Kutcher or @aplusk, and Iron Man 2 Director Jon Favreau or @Jon_Favreau, both active on Twitter and with many followers, could push an Oscar-related tweet. Maybe AMPAS could get Miley Cyrus back on Twitter? She’s a presenter this year.

The current problem is AMPAS doesn’t have a Twitter account, still, as of this writing. the reasons for this are not officially known here, but one can guess. AMPAS is stuck, hopefully not forever, in an old media mindset. While social networks and blogs are helping to spread the TV-generated Oscar talk, what’s missing is Twitter, which can start media buzz without the aide of television, yet cause people to watch television. Why AMPAS doesn’t get that is beyond comprehension.

For anyone who requires an example of how Twitter drove people to television, and indeed to demand TV coverage of a something, it’s the Iran Protests. now, for those who read this and have to launch a cynical “You’re comparing the Oscars to the Iran Protests” comment, go ahead, but from the perspective of media relationships and message activation there is a clear equation: if something happens or is made to happen in the World, and a set of Twitter followers deems it important and they are large enough, those Twitter users can influence a change in what television does.

That’s what happened in the case of the Iran Protest. CNN was panned so badly for its awfully small coverage of the Iran Protests that a new hashtag called #CNNFail was created and propagated. It was both a curse and a complement: Twitter users knew CNN had the resources to cover the Iran Protests and demanded they do it. Eventually CNN fell in line.

The point here is such a relationship can be manufactured to increase TV ratings. I’ve tried to explain this, in various ways to AMPAS, and I know it’s on their radar, but nothing has been done. the fear in this corner is TV ratings would certainly improve under the Twitter system I suggest. of course, having an active blog to feed to Twitter’s part of the deal.

But of course, who cares? well, millions do. Oscar’s a celebration of the great things that people do in film. In fact I frankly get annoyed at those who tell me “I don’t follow the Oscars or I didn’t see a film..” That’s not the point. if those people knew someone who was in line to get an Oscar, they’d change their view in a heart-beat.

As one who’s been surrounded by death and funerals over the last three years, it’s vitally important and morally right to celebrate people while they’re alive. That’s really what all these award shows are about, especially Oscar. That’s why it’s important to make sure people know about what’s happening with Oscar and that’s where Twitter and New Media comes in.

My prediction is Oscar’s ratings will be much better than in 2009, but not quite up to record levels. It’s the record levels that are key. Not using social networks effectively is the problem. It’s one AMPAS must correct and sooner rather than later.

Now, my bags are almost packed (or at least enough for me to blast a blog post), and I’m getting ready to fly to LA and to Beverly Hills and Hollywood and Highland for the Oscars. Never been there before. I’m looking forward to checking out the Oscar MTV-U event Saturday morning, where college journalists will learn who’s won the right to report from the Red Carpet. that will be something to see the faces of the winners. Then there’s a number of TBDs for me, and finally Red Carpet Sunday morning and the Night of 100 Stars Party for the Oscars.

Stay tuned for my predictions, Tweets, and videos starting later today.

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Posted by: Zennie62 (Email) | March 05 2010 at 06:46 AM

Listed Under: Entertainment

Friday Box Office: SHUTTER ISLAND #1; COP OUT #2; THE CRAZIES #3 …

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Shutter Island, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Mark Ruffalo, was the #1 movie at the US/Canada box office on Friday (Feb. 26), according to Box Office Mojo. Martin Scorsese’s dark thriller grossed $6.67 million for a total of $59.5 million.

At #2, Kevin Smith’s Cop Out, starring Bruce Willis and Tracy Morgan, took in less than initial estimates published last night: $5.975 million on its debut ($1,897 per screen). a notch behind it was another new entry, Breck Eisner’s horror flick The Crazies, starring Timothy Olyphant and Radha Mitchell, with $5.97 million ($2,411 per screen).

James Cameron’s sci-fi adventure Avatar, starring Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, and Sigourney Weaver, was #4 with $3.1 million, getting very close to the $700 million mark which it should cross sometime today. At #5, Garry Marshall’s all-star Valentine’s Day took in $2.94 million. The romantic comedy stars Bradley Cooper, Julia Roberts, Ashton Kutcher, Jessica Alba, Anne Hathaway, Taylor Lautner, Eric Dane, Carter Jenkins, Taylor Swift, and many others.

Chris Columbus‘ adventure flick Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief, starring Logan Lerman, was #6 with $2.4 million, followed by the Channing Tatum-Amanda Seyfried romantic melodrama Dear John with $1.5 million. Joe Johnston’s The Wolfman, starring Benicio del Toro and Anthony Hopkins, was next with $1.1 million.

Dwayne Johnson’s Tooth Fairy, which always does better on weekends — though it has already lost quite a bit of steam — was #9 with 730K.

Rounding out the top thirteen were Jeff BridgesCrazy Heart ($610K), Sandra Bullock’s blockbuster The Blind Side ($325), the Kristen Bell-Josh Duhamel romantic comedy When in Rome ($315K), and Denzel Washington’s post-apocalyptic drama The Book of Eli ($300K).

Photo: Shutter Island (Andrew Cooper / Paramount)

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Kutcher urges Russians to take to Twitter etc

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Ashton Kutcher is going global. During a visit to Moscow, the celebrity world’s most followed Twitterer has encouraged Russians to share ideas through social media websites.

Ashton Kutcher grabs coffee in Park City. Kutcher was in town doing promotional interviews for his film in Sundance. – Whittle / Splash News

The star of Valentine’s Day, who is married to Demi Moore, has more than 4.5 million followers on Twitter.

‘More importantly than anything I write, it’s really about what you write on your blogs,’ Kutcher said.

‘That is the power of the social web. you don’t have to be a celebrity or sit on a podium to have a community that you can build, run an idea, a thought, a piece of leadership,’ he told the Russians.

He was in Moscow with a US delegation to promote exchange of technology.

Kutcher was true to his word when he recently bounced back from the canning of his show, the Beautiful Life, to launch a web version for YouTube.

Valentine’s Day, a star-studded rom com, hit number one at the box office at the weekend.

Google and Twitter – Affiliate Guard Dog

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

I’ve turned off the tweets on my sites. I have roughly 20 twitter accounts… I load up my months worth of tweets, and it automatically posts a tweet every 30-60 mins for 15 hrs of the day across all 20 accounts (relevant tweets to each account)

I get people joining me, but it hasn’t added any direct monetary value that I can see. I’ve probably spent more time making money from twitter, then it has actually generated.

When all said and done, I am realizing that twitter is used for impulse reading and more importantly – trending topics (i’ll explain why this is important below).

By impulse reading, I mean that people who are looking for a particular topic at the particular moment. It also makes famous people more accessible on a “one on one” basis. No more press release by the agent, or interview by E-taintment… its omg.. omg omg omg.. Ashton Kutcher wrote that 28 seconds ago and I was there for it. Impulse reading.

Trending topics gives you an insight directly, into the vein of what is popular at the present time, in internet micro bursts. we don’t need to wait for google and yahoos reports to see what the most talked about topics were anymore. Twitter can deliver that to you as it happens, because everyone is talking about it as a collective.

This is important to marketeers, because if you are like me… when you see a topic which everyone is talking about, for that moment in time, it could be a 8-12 page website worth building around and sticking up some google adwords. 200 websites making $100 a year, at a cost of $8 to the registrar.

The most successful twitter account which makes money across all the marketeers I’ve met and spoken to… is a funny t-shirt twitter account. Twitter directly generates $200 a month in sales for them.

Ashton Kutcher's Unaired Twitter/Fart Joke SNL Sketch Masterpiece, “Tooter …

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Hey, you know how Ashton Kutcher hosted Saturday Night Live this weekend, and it was totally awesome?

Yeah, well it would have been that much more totally awesome if they had aired this skit. Behold, Demi Moore’s man-child spoofing his own Twitter obsession with an unfortunately unaired skit about his latest venture, Tooter, which alerts the world to when he farts. Yup, that’s right.

We have no idea why this didn’t make the cut, but check it out; it’s a real blast. And as crass as it might be, it’s still less objectionable than some of the things that Kutcher has tweeted.