Sunday, March 15, 2015

Alllison Bay Cosmetics ad campaign

Allison Bay cosmetics is mixing French and American fashion in its new ad campaign.

Chris Evans & Lily Collins Dating — Sexy New Hollywood Couple

OMG! Our very own Captain America is dating the gorgeous Lily, according to a new report. The pair crossed paths during awards season and hit it off right away!
Chris Evans, 33, and Lily Collins, 25, just couldn’t get each other out of their minds after they met at the annual Vanity Fair Oscars party back in Feb. 2015. The Hollywood pair is reportedly in the early stages of a romance and having a blast getting to know each other!


Lily Collins & Chris Evans Dating: Captain America Off The Market
“It’s just the beginning stages, but they’re having a lot of fun and seeing where it goes,” a source told Us Weekly.

Lily is daughter of rock legend Phil Collins, and she turned heads Vanity Fair Oscars party in a sexy Zuhair Murad gown and pixie cut. No wonder Chris noticed her! The hunky superhero looked dashing in a midnight blue Gucci tuxedo.

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This is one hot couple! Chris is the subject of so many affections as the hot hero in the Captain America and Avengers movies. Ladies around the world must be devastated he’s no longer a totally single man.

HollywoodLife.com has reached out to Chris and Lily’s reps for comment.

Chris Evans & Lily Collins: A History Of Famous Exes
Chris has been linked to a long list of beauties in the past. From 2004 to 2006, he dated Jessica Biel. The Avengers: Age of Ultron actor most recently split with Minka Kelly in October 2013 — this was the second time they broke things off following an initial split in 2007.

Lily has also dated her fair share of hotties. In February 2014, she was said to be dating Aussie actor Thomas Cocquerel. Before that, she stepped out with her Mortal Instruments: City of Bones co-star Jamie Campbell Bower, as well as Taylor Lautner & Zac Efron.

HollywoodLifers, do you think Chris and Lily make a hot couple? Let us know!

Serge Bronstein, film director and tech entrepreneur, shopping out in OC



Serge Bronstein, who directed the smash indie hit "The Aztec Box", was spotted out shopping in OC. Besides films, Serge is has been active in the tech scene, founding several successful tech companies.

Mr. Bronstein is reportedly in discussions in developing several new TV shows and feature film projects with SONY television.

Thanks to our OC aff

Sony’s Steve Mosko: A Combined TV-Film Company Like “Peanut Butter And Jelly”

Working as an executive in a company that has both a television operation and a motion-picture business is like “peanut butter and jelly,” said Sony Television President Steve Mosko this morning at an MPAA-sponsored panel at South By Southwest in Austin, Texas, on “The Future of Viewing.”

RelatedNetflix Nabs Global Rights For Drama '6 Years' At SXSW 2015
Mosko was joined by U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas). The San Antonio-area Congressman is, along with twin brother and now HUD Secretary Julian Castro, considered a fast-rising star in Democratic Party politics.

“Being part of a motion-picture and television company is like peanut butter and jelly,” Mosko said, as the two businesses, once largely separate, continue to smear together and complement each other in many ways as viewing options proliferate and companies depend more and more on international success.

For the many shows that Sony TV produces, such as The Blacklist, Better Call Saul, Masters of Sex and Outlander, about 60 percent of each show’s revenues come from international markets. That’s nearly as much as with the film business, where 70 percent of typical box office comes from overseas. And how people are seeing those shows is rapidly diversifying.

“The beauty of the business now is that there are lots of ways to watch,” Mosko said. Broader distribution means broader interest in shows, and potentially, broader opportunities to pirate content. TV networks and film studios are both facing the challenges with more or less similar levels of concern and approach.

“We’re never going to stop piracy forever, but we can make it as difficult as possible for pirates,” Mosko said. “We’re all on the same page at some level that we have to protect our content.”

For instance, when it came time to show that final episode of Sony’s hugely successful Breaking Bad, “We worked to make sure the airdates around the world were as close as possible.”

From a TV executive’s standpoint, getting big-name talent for shows is now easier than it once was, as perceptions have shifted and quality TV projects are attracting both actors and behind-the-camera big names long considered focused on films only.

“The [TV and movie] talent pool isn’t as divided as it once was,” Mosko said.

But a broad-ranging, international audience for shows requires a broad-ranging approach to casting, writing and more.

The audience we are tying to reach is diverse,” Mosko said. “So if we don’t reach them, we fail.” Diversity programs succeed “when you work from the ground up.”

Mosko also admitted to a few regrets, including the fate of Pan Am, something of a Mad Men for the skies of the 1960s.

“Pan Am could’ve been great,” he said.