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Tyler Perry’s New Movie “Medea’s Big Happy Family” Opens #2 at Box Office


Tyler Perry’s new movie “Madea’s Big Happy Family” opened to raving reviews from movie-goers across the country this weekend. Tyler has been the subject of many headlines after his outburst against Director Spike Lee went viral last week. In response to Spike’s numerous critiques against Perry’s successful works, Perry says, “Spike Lee can go straight to hell.” Lee has been quoted as saying that Perry’s work is coonery and buffoonery, and that it represents black people stereotypically. Actor Idris Alba who even played in a Tyler Perry movie not featuring the Madea character also says that the Medea character is buffoonery.

None of that mattered as Perry’s latest film opened #2 at the box office with 25.8 million in first weekend sales. The movie ‘Rio’ narrowly held on to #1 for a second straight week with 26.8 million.  

As for Perry, The debut triumphed over Perry’s last film “For Colored Girls,” that finished with 20.1 million in its opening weekend sales. Perry doesn’t appear to be slowing down, and his fans still seem to love Madea.

Perry was quoted on the Conan Show as saying “As long as people want to see it, I’ll keep going. I’ll keep doing it,” Tyler said Wednesday on “Conan.” “If people stop coming to see the character, what will happen is that old broad will die really quickly.” In the midst of all the excitement, it looks like the playwright and cross-dressing actor is preparing to launch a new show, “For Better or for Worse.”

The new production will premiere on TBS and is based on the characters of couples flick “Why Did I Get Married?”

Sources reveal that the show will likely follow a group of college best friends as they deal with life’s issues: Carl and Leslie, a beautiful, happily married couple who want their friends to be as happy as they are; Brian, a TV sportscaster who has a volatile yet comedic relationship with his wife, Michelle, a hair salon owner; and Janice, a therapist married to a sharp, ambitious lawyer, Jordan, who’s trying to keep his secrets secret.

According to reports, Miss USA 2008, Crystle Stewart has already booked a part in the series, but it’s not known which part she will play.

In the meantime, for those of you who thought Madea was going to disappear for a while, Perry said she’s here to stay and ain’t retiring any time soon. Sorry Spike.

He also lamented about his methods of branding, saying he may have gone overboard.

“People forget that Walt Disney was a person. His name was above the title and it’s a great example. When you’re branding yourself and building a business [you] use your name. I think I just did it a little bit too much,” Tyler said.

Watch Tyler spill the beans on “Conan”:





Bishop Eddie Long’s Case Seems Near the End as he Preaches Easter Services


Bishop Eddie Long preached Easter services at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church amid reports that mediation sessions could be close to an agreement in his sexual misconduct cases. Long spoke on the importance of prayer and emphasized that the Christian message is aimed at sinners.

“There’s always somebody going to be yakking at you … you don’t have to answer to anybody but God,” Long said. The resurrection “was not for perfect folk … but for the least, those who thought they failed,” Long said. Concluding, Long said, “This ain’t going to be no bad Friday for me, it’s going to be a Good Friday.”

Channel 2 Action News reports that Sunday Bishop Eddie Long seemed to have embedded messages in his sermons that referenced his accusers.

“You ain’t messin’ with me. I shall rise again and I ain’t going through this,” Long said.

His sermon comes just days after reports came in that the mega-church pastor was close to reaching a settlement with four former church members who accused him of using his spiritual powers to engage in sexual activity.

Long never directly addressed the lawsuit or any possible settlement. Instead, he imparted apparent cryptic commentary about his accusers.

“You have to go down there and let the devil know that what they thought was gonna kill you, didn’t kill you. What they thought was gonna bring terror to you, didn’t bring terror to you and you made the enemy a public spectacle,” Long said during one sermon.

On Friday, Dekalb County Magistrate Judge Johnny Panos told our Channel 2’s Tom Jones he jump started mediation between Long and the accusers and that they were close to an agreement.

“Why wait to the summer? Why wait to the fall? Get it done now and what better time to do it than Holy week,” Panos said.

If an agreement isn’t reached, the case could go to trial this summer. Channel 2 also reported there was apparently one major obstacle preventing a resolution, but that appears to have been settled and the two sides are working on resolving the remaining issues.

As apart of the settlement legal experts predict each of the four young men would get large sums of money, with a clause that prevents them from speaking publicly about the case or settlement. If that happens, we may never know the whole truth.


 



This Weeks Billboard Top Gospel Albums


Hello Fear, the brand new release from Kirk Franklin, celebrates its fourth week atop the Billboard Top Gospel Charts. The album also sits at #4 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Charts and #14 on the Billboard Top 200 Charts. Mary Mary‘s latest release Something Big holds to the #2 position this week. The album also sits at #10 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Charts and #37 on the Billboard Top 200 Charts. The WOW Gospel 2011 compilation holds to the #3 spot, while Church on the Moon from Deitrick Haddon maintains the #4 position. Israel Houghton‘s latest Love God. Love People: The London Sessionsjumps fifteen places to round out the week’s top five albums. In other chart news, Get Ready from Forever Jones jumps five spots to #17, while James Hall & The Voices of Citadel‘s latest Won’t It Be Wonderful moves five spots to #22. 

In the world of radio, “I Smile” from Kirk Franklin celebrates its second week at the top of the radio charts. Vashawn Mitchell‘s “Nobody Greater” moves to the #2 spot while “I Give Myself Away” from William McDowell comes in at the #3 position. “Walking” from Mary Mary takes the #4 spot while “Well Done” from Deitrick Haddon rounds out the week’s top five songs.



ABC News Apologizes to Frederick K.C. Price for Airing Misleading Video


The L.A. Times reports that four years after airing a misleading video segment about Crenshaw Christian Center founder Dr. Frederick K.C. Price, ABC News has issued a public apology to Price.

In a story called “Enough!” that aired on ABC’s “20/20” and “Good Morning America” in March 2007, ABC News and then-correspondent John Stossel investigated whether ministers of several large congregations had used donations to support lavish lifestyles. The segment featured a 10-second video clip taken from a previously televised sermon that showed Price saying: “I live in a 25-room mansion, I have my own $6-million yacht, I have my own private jet and I have my own helicopter and I have seven luxury automobiles.”

In reality, Price did not own any of those things: He was preaching about a hypothetical person who was rich but spiritually unsatisfied. “Friends, to me that’s bad success,” Price added during the sermon, though that part was cut from the ABC News segment.

Newsmagazines have faced battles over how their subjects are portrayed before: NBC’s “Dateline” issued an on-air apology for staging a car-truck crash, and ABC News and “20/20” went to court over accusations that the network committed fraud in a hidden-camera expose alleging unsanitary conditions at Food Lion’s supermarkets.

“ABC News apologizes for any harm caused to you as a result of its broadcast of a video clip that ABC News stated was of you speaking about yourself when in fact you were talking about a hypothetical person,” Kerry Smith of ABC News said in her statement to Price. “ABC News regrets that it did not conduct sufficient investigation of the clip after receiving it to establish its correct context.  By presenting the footage out of context, ABC News misled its audience and failed to meet its own standards, which ABC deeply regrets.” 

“We had faith that this matter was in God’s hands,” Price replied in a statement. “And once again God has shown us that when we trust in Him and act in good conscience we are led to the truth, and to a place of abundant joy.”

A source familiar with the situation says that ABC News made a similar apology on the air in 2007, but issuing a written apology was required as part of a recent legal settlement between ABC News and Price.



Drive-Thru Funeral Home Opens in Compton





Known for her flamboyant hats and dazzling jewelry, Bernice Woods relished being in the public eye.

So when the longtime community volunteer and former Compton city councilwoman died last month, her children opted to place her open casket in the drive-thru display window of Robert L. Adams Mortuary in Compton.

“My mother was a community person,” said Gregory W. Woods, 55, the youngest of the deceased woman’s 10 children. “She meant so much to so many people. It is only fitting and proper that she would be viewed this way.”

Adams funeral parlor, a fixture in Compton since 1974, brings to the business of death a convenience of the living: drive-thru viewing of the dead.

Visitors are greeted by a huge red-lettered sign above the entrance of the stone building on East Palmer Street. In the reception lounge, gold chandeliers dangle so low that tall visitors have to duck. Plastic swathes the pink upholstered seats.

And off to the side of the main double doors is the covered and paved 12-foot wide drive-thru, its long glass display window visible from the street.

A handful of drive-thru funeral parlors are known to operate throughout the nation. There’s at least one in Chicago, another in Louisiana. But Adams is believed to be the only one in Southern California, according to owner Peggy Scott Adams.

“It’s a unique feature that sets us aside from other funeral parlors,” said Scott Adams. She married into the business in 1988 when she became wife to businessman Robert Lee Adams Sr., a former Compton politician. He died in 2005. She continued his legacy. A suit-clad bust made in his image stands near the entrance.

“You can come by after work, you don’t need to deal with parking, you can sign the book outside and the family knows that you paid your respects,” said Scott Adams. “It’s a convenience thing.”

Click Here to Read Full Report courtesy of the LA Times.





The 2011 Dove Awards Winners Announced: Watch Broadcast Sunday April 24th


Sherri Sheperd – Photo Credit: Rick Diamond with Getty Images
 

ATLANTA, GA — (April 20, 2011) — The 42nd Annual GMA Dove Awards were handed out tonight at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia celebrating Gospel and Christian music’s biggest event. The 42nd Annual GMA Doves Awards hosted by TV host and comedian Sherri Shepherd will be televised on GMC, America’s favorite network for uplifting entertainment (www.watchgmctv.com), on Sunday, April 24 at 7 p.m. PT.
This is the first year that GMC presented their UPLIFT SOMEONE award, which recognizes individuals who better the world and inspire others to do the same.
The Dove Awards in the overall categories went to:

Artist of the Year
: Francesca Battistelli

Female Vocalist of the Year:
Francesca Battistelli

Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song of the Year: Marvin Sapp

Traditional Gospel Album of the Year: Tamela Mann

Contemporary Gospel Album of the Year: Israel Houghton 


Male Vocalist of the Year:
Chris August

Group of the Year:
NEEDTOBREATHE

New Artist of the Year
: Chris August

Song of the Year: “Sometimes I Cry”; Jason Crabb (artist), Gerald Crabb, Christian Taylor Music (BMI)

Songwriter of the Year: Gerald Crabb

Producer of the Year: Ian Eskelin

Incoming GMA Chairman of the Board Mitchell Solerek said, “What an amazing night of music and honor. Tonight’s performances were all a testament to why we are all here. On behalf of membership of the GMA, we are proud to present this year’s Dove winners and congratulate each of them and the nominees on their achievements. We would also like to thank the city of Atlanta and the ACVB for all their efforts in making this year’s Dove Awards an unprecedented success.”

“GMA Dove Awards represent Gospel and Christian music’s biggest night of the year and tonight’s performances were extraordinary,” said Charley Humbard, President, GMC. “Honoring some of the industry’s most celebrated names in our home town of Atlanta and broadcasting this inspiring event to a nationwide audience reinforces GMC’s commitment to bringing the best in uplifting music and entertainment to our viewers,” he continued. Multi-award winners tonight are Chris August, Francesca Battistelli, Jason Crabb and Point of Grace pulling down 3 Doves a piece; making them the top award winners for the evening.

This is the second year in a row for Francesca Battistelli to take home Female Vocalist of the Year honors and the first year to be crowned Artist of the Year. She also won Pop/Contemporary Recorded Song of the Year. First-time nominee and multi-award winner for Male, New Artist and Pop/Contemporary Album of the Year Chris August had quite a night.

The night was full of special collaborations. Chris Tomlin and the Passion Artists ignited the evening with a Praise and Worship sing-a-long of “Our God”, Third Day’s single “Children of God,” represented hope as Third Day was joined by Mark Hall of Casting Crowns and Steven Curtis Chapman to honor Chapman and his wife Mary Beth’s ministry, SHOW HOPE with the GMC UPLIFT SOMEONE award. Kenny Rogers and Point of Grace finished with a standing ovation. Other show highlights included all of the Female Vocalist of the Year nominees performing a tribute to the legendary Sandi Patty, the Dove Award’s most honored female singer to date.

Kirk Franklin raised the roof in his inimitable way his high energy closing that rounded out an

evening of performances that ranged from country to hip-hop to contemporary gospel, rock and pop all representing the uplifting message of Gospel and Christian music. All-in-all, the evening played host to many outstanding performances by Jason Crabb and MIKESCHAIR, Natalie Grant and LeCrae, Committed and Ernie Haase & Signature Sound, Mary Mary, Kenny Rogers with Point of Grace and many more. The Dove Awards represent a wide-array of musical styles ranging from Adult Contemporary, Bluegrass, Country, Gospel, Inspirational, Pop, Rap/Hip-Hop, Rock, Spanish Language, Urban and Worship categories. First time host Sherri Shepherd was a standout having the audience in the palm of her hand and clearly enjoyed the musical performances. This is the first time a non-musical act has hosted the awards show.

Pre-show Highlights:

Rock Recorded Song of the Year was awarded to the rock band RED who was not able to attend this year’s show, but accepted via cell phone. Backstage generated a lot of excitement mixing Tim Tebow with Greg Jennings and Ruben Studdard with Michelle Williams. Sandi Patty, who was honored in a tribute with all of the nominees for Female Vocalist of the Year, lit up the room with Natalie Grant and Mary Mary.

Follow us on TWITTER @gmctv #doveawards and Facebook.com/gmctv

About GMA:
Founded in 1964, the Gospel Music Association serves as the face and voice for the Gospel/Christian music community and is dedicated to exposing, promoting and celebrating the Gospel through music of all styles including Pop, Rock, Praise & Worship, Urban Gospel, R&B, Hip Hop, Southern Gospel, Bluegrass, Country and more. The GMA community consists of members including agents, artists, church leaders, managers, promoters, radio personnel, record company executives, retailers, songwriters and other industry visionaries. The GMA produces the GMA Dove Awards, GMA Dove Week and IMMERSE. For more on supporting the GMA or becoming a member, please visit www.gospelmusic.org or contact the GMA directly at 615.277.1376.

About GMC:
GMC (www.watchgmctv.com) is America’s favorite channel for uplifting music and family entertainment. In 2010, The Parents Television Council™ awarded its Entertainment Seal of Approval™ to GMC for being “an authentic family-friendly cable network.” GMC was the only television network to receive the highly coveted honor last year.
GMC can be seen in nearly 48 million homes on various cable systems around the country, on DIRECTV on channel 338 and on Verizon FiOS on channel 224.




Tyler Perry to Spike Lee: “Spike Lee Can Go Straight to Hell”


Tyler Perry voiced his frustration with Spike Lee on Tuesday at a Beverly Hills press conference for the West Coast premiere of his new film Madea’s Big Happy Family, according to Box Office Magazine.

In a 2009 interview with Black Enterprise’s Ed Gordon, Lee alluded to Perry’s work on film and television in particular as coonery buffoonery.

“I’m so sick of hearing about damn Spike Lee,” Perry said during the press conference. “Spike can go straight to hell! You can print that. I am sick of him talking about me, I am sick of him saying, ‘this is a coon, this is a buffoon.’ I am sick of him talking about black people going to see movies. This is what he said: ‘you vote by what you see,’ as if black people don’t know what they want to see.”

“I am sick of him — he talked about Whoopi, he talked about Oprah, he talked about me, he talked about Clint Eastwood. Spike needs to shut the hell up!” Perry reportedly said.

Regarding Perry, Lee has said, “Each artist should be allowed to pursue their artistic endeavors. I know it’s making a lot of money and breaking records, but we can do better.”

Lee went on to say, “I am a huge basketball fan, and when I watch the games on TNT, I see these two ads for these two shows [House of Payne, Meet the Browns], and I am scratching my head. We got a black president, and we going back to Mantan Moreland and Sleep ‘n’ Eat?”

“A lot of this is on us, you vote with your pocket book, your wallet, you vote with your time, sitting in front of the idiot box. And the man has a huge audience, and he’s, Tyler’s very smart in what he’s done,” said Lee.

Lee believes that directors are different.

“We shouldn’t think that Tyler Perry is going to make the same film that I am going to make, or that John Singleton or my cousin Malcolm Lee [would make]” said Lee. “As African-Americans, we’re not one monolithic group, so there is room for all of that. But at the same time, for me, the imaging is troubling and it harkens back to Amos n’ Andy.”

At the press conference on Tuesday, Perry discussed housing with the criticism he receives from some people in the black community.

“I’ve never seen Jewish people attack Seinfeld and say, ‘This is a stereotype,'” he said. “I’ve never seen Italian people attack The Sopranos, I’ve never seen Jewish people complaining about Mrs. Doubtfire or Dustin Hoffman in Tootsie. I never saw it. It’s always black people, and this is something that I cannot undo.”

Perry says other black artists faced similar critiques from their African-American peers.

“Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois went through the exact same thing; Langston Hughes said that Zora Neale Hurston, the woman who wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God, was a new version of the ‘darkie’ because she spoke in a southern dialect and a Southern tone. And I’m sick of it from us; we don’t have to worry about anybody else trying to destroy us and take shots because we do it to ourselves,” said Perry.

Perry’s latest film Madea’s Big Happy Family opens Friday in theaters.



Obama Reflects on Death and Resurrection of Jesus: Bishop T.D. Jakes in Attendance



President Barack Obama (left) prays with Christian leaders, including Bishop T.D. Jakes (right), at the second Easter Prayer Breakfast in the East Room of the White House, Tuesday, April 19, 2011.

For President Barack Obama, the resurrection of Jesus Christ keeps things in perspective. That was his Easter reflection as he addressed Christian leaders Tuesday morning at the White House.

Obama continued the tradition of hosting an Easter Prayer Breakfast – which he wants to make annual – during Holy Week, one of the most sacred times of year for Christians as they mark the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

“I wanted to host this breakfast for a simple reason – because as busy as we are, as many tasks pile up, during this season, we are reminded that there’s something about the resurrection … of our savior, Jesus Christ, that puts everything else in perspective,” Obama said in his remarks.

Though it wasn’t exactly a worship service, the brief gathering – held a day after Obama reached out to the Jewish community with an intimate Passover Seder – proved to resonate among the more than 100 guests.

The guest list this year included some prominent megachurch pastors such as Bishop T.D. Jakes of The Potter’s House, Tim Keller of Redeemer Presbyterian Church, Andy Stanley of North Point Community Church, Dave Gibbons of NewSong Community Church, Mark Batterson of National Community Church, and Joel Hunter of Northland Church.

While acknowledging the busy schedules of the pastors and denominational leaders seated in the East Room, as well as his own full plate and swelling inbox, Obama offered the prayer breakfast as a time to gather and be strengthened as they reflect on what Jesus did more than 2,000 years ago.

“The triumph of Palm Sunday… The humility of Jesus washing the disciples’ feet. His slow march up that hill, and the pain and the scorn and the shame of the cross. And we’re reminded that in that moment, he took on the sins of the world – past, present and future – and he extended to us that unfathomable gift of grace and salvation through his death and resurrection,” he said.

Citing the Old Testament book of Isaiah, Obama added, “But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.”

Obama called it “magnificent grace,” “expansive grace,” “amazing grace.”

It’s that grace that calls him to reflect, pray, ask God for forgiveness, and praise God for “the gift of … His Son and our Savior,” he said.

“And that’s why we have this breakfast,” he pointed out. “Because in the middle of critical national debates, in the middle of our busy lives, we must always make sure that we are keeping things in perspective.”

While children and spouses also help keep things in perspective, the president noted that “nothing beats Scripture and the reminder of the eternal.” Bishop Vashti McKenzie, the first female bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, offered a powerful prayer after being introduced by Obama as the “high-tech bishop” for her iPad.

“I just have to make a quick point: you noticed that these days prayers are on an iPad,” Obama said to laughter.

Reading from her Apple tablet computer, McKenzie prayed, “We remember this morning that in the cross you have demonstrated for all time your wonderful love.

“We thank you for Easter’s reversal of Good Friday. … Christ is risen. Therefore, we know even in our confused and battered world you are bringing life out of death and hope out of despair.”

Keller and Bishop Jakes also spoke at the event.

The second Easter Prayer Breakfast was held as fewer Americans believe Obama is a Christian. An August 2010 poll by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that only 34 percent of Americans, down from 48 percent in 2009, say Obama is a Christian. Among Protestant pastors, 41 percent say they believe him to be a Christian, according to a separate December 2010 poll by LifeWay Research.

Obama’s plans for Easter weekend have not yet been released. Last Easter, Obama and his family attended Allen Chapel AME Church in Southeast Washington.
 



Yolanda Adams Debuts New Single “Be Still” New Album in Stores May 3rd!


After several years on recording hiatus Yolanda is back with a new CD.  Yolanda’s new CD, Becoming, will be available exclusively at Walmart. The release date is May 3, 2011, but you can pre-order today at the Walmart website.

Becoming Track Listing
1. Golden
2. Rejoice
3. Be Still
4. Just When
5. Not Giving Up
6. Living Proof
7. Time
8. You Can (Taylor’s Song)
9. What Would You Do
10. Overwhelmed



Historic Gospel Record Company Malaco Records Destroyed by Tornado


WLBT News is reporting that the Malaco Records, home of gospel music artists such as Bebe & CeCe Winans, The Caravans, Mississippi Mass Choir and Dorothy Norwood, was heavily damaged after it was hit by a tornado.

One of Malaco’s founders, Wolf Stephenson, was inside with about 15 employees when the tornado powered through. Stephenson said, “We started seeing limbs and debris flying through the air and decided we better take cover.”
Luckily, says Stephenson, everywhere they took cover remained structurally intact and miraculously, no one was injured. Stephenson says the warehouse can probably be saved. As for the rest of Malaco Records: “Well, the buildings are old. It’s a real tricky question as to whether or not it’s worth rebuilding,” said Stephenson.

Here is a look at the actual tornado that ripped through the building.  Watch the official news report by clicking here.