Poll names Jay Leno the Top TV Personality

There's nothing like a good poll to both get the pulse of the nation and stir up some fun tête-à-tête. Harris Interactive, one of market research's big guns, sought to find out who was television's favorite personality and the results are in--number one goes to NBC's late-night pitchman Jay Leno.

The Harris Poll surveyed 2,388 adults and found that the man with the chin famous for such bits as "Headlines" was the top vote getter. Leno, who finished third overall in last year's Harris Poll, rated better with men than women, and better with people aged 44 and older than youngsters.

Second place went to Hugh Laurie, who plays Dr. House on Fox's hit House. Third on the list was Ellen DeGeneres, who was tops among women and hosts her own successful daytime talk show on NBC. Fourth went to Queen of Media Oprah Winfrey and fifth went to her best frenemy David Letterman. Rounding out the top 10 were (in order) Jon Stewart, Charlie Sheen, Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert, and Mark Harmon (tied with Colbert for ninth).

Ousted from the top 10 this year were Bill O'Reilly, Ray Romano, and Homer Simpson. O'Reilly finished eighth last year, while Romano and Homer tied for ninth.

Did your favorite make the list?

Via TV.com

Ghost Rider 2 in the Works, with Nick Cage

Bloody Disgusting has confirmed that Columbia Pictures is officially out to screenwriters for Ghost Rider 2, and star Nicolas Cage is already signed on to reprise the role as Johnny Blaze.

This is shocking because nobody I know enjoyed the 2007 film when it was released. In fact, the Internet Movie Database user rating is a 5.3 (which is somewhere between bad and very bad) and a 28% on the Rotten Tomatoes critics-rated Tomatometer. The film didn’t even make big bucks at the box office. Made for $110 million, the film grossed $228 million worldwide (again, about half of which went to exhibitor costs) which means the film barely made a theatrical profit. But for a superhero movie like Ghost Rider, the real money is made in merchandising and DVD sales, which explains the interest in a sequel.

I use to read Ghost Rider comic books when I was younger, and I really believe that the comic property could be turned into a pretty cool movie. Lets just hope that Mark Steven Johnson isn’t sitting in the director’s chair this time around. Sony needs to learn from Marvel’s recent wins and hire a director who is a few levels higher than the material.

Via /Film

The Lonely Island: Incredibad

Dubbed by many critics as the world's `funniest comedy team for the internet generation,' the comedic collaborative of Andy Samberg, Jorma Taccone, and Akiva Schaffer will release, "INCREDIBAD", their first comedy CD/DVD February 10, 2009. The innovative triumvirate commonly known as The Lonely Island made online and television history with some of the webs most popular satirical sketches, including such SNL/YouTube classics `D**k In A Box,' featuring Justin Timberlake, and `Lazy Sunday,' a farcical rap about `The Chronicles Of Narnia.' Their latest digital short and first single from "INCREDIBAD, "Jizz In My Pants," became the #1 Most Viewed Video on YouTube with after one airing on SNL almost 2 months ago. The group adopted the moniker in honor of their first L.A. apartment where the trio initially began making short films with the idea of posting them on the internet. Their homegrown website grew in popularity thanks to breakthrough sketches such as 'The 'BU' and homemade music videos like, 'Ka-Blamo!' and 'Stork Patrol' among others. Mainstream entertainment offers followed and in 2005, Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels hired them (Samberg is in the cast, Schaffer and Taccone are writer/directors) after being introduced to their work at the MTV Awards. The group's innovative `SNL Digital Shorts' have become the `must-watch' segment for the past four seasons of the historic late-night comedy show, with classics such as `D**k In A Box' featuring Justin Timberlake, `Lazy Sunday,' 'Natalie's Rap' featuring Natalie Portman, and 'Iran So Far' featuring Adam Levine sketches creating unprecedented online buzz. `D**k In a Box' garnered an incredible 28 million views before NBC moved the clip to hulu.com and nbc.com. The classic R&B spoof won a 2007 Emmy award for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics. The comedians have been honored by Wired Magazine for their contribution to the viral-video revolution.
Get Incredibad here.
Download "Jizz in my Pants" Mp3
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View "Jizz in my Pants" video

Arpaio to Transport County Inmates Via Light Rail?

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio's new system for hauling prisoners on Metro light rail isn't being met with universal praise.

Arpaio spun the plan as a cost-saving measure when he unveiled it to the media on Tuesday. He calls it "Con Rail," and it lets deputies ride the new rail line to and from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport so his office can save money on parking.

One issue: The airport says parking for law agencies is free.

Officers transporting prisoners can leave their cars at the Phoenix police's airport bureau. The officer and prisoner then ride to the terminal in a bureau police car.

"Nobody pays to park there," airport spokeswoman Deborah Ostreicher said. "That's where the police cars park. They have a few spaces in there. They open them to fellow law-enforcement officers."

Arpaio's office apparently hadn't heard. It has been paying to park at the airport - the maximum fee is $25 a day - since its free parking cards were canceled in 2007 to open spaces for airline passengers.

Under the gun to cut spending, along with the rest of the county, Arpaio decided rail transportation could save a few dollars. His spokeswoman, Lisa Allen, said that every dollar counts in cutting a budget that last year was $289 million.

She estimated that the office spent $25,000 last year to park at the airport. Arpaio estimates the office will spend $72,000 for airport parking during his current four-year term.

"There's not one person over here with the understanding that we have any free parking at the airport," Allen said.

Arpaio's announcement that he would begin using the train to move prisoners caught Phoenix by surprise. Allen said top Phoenix officials called Tuesday after the press release hit to offer "whatever you need" to resolve the parking dispute. Meanwhile, calls and e-mail messages started to filter in to Metro from worried passengers.

"It comes down to them not being comfortable putting themselves or their families on the trains," Metro spokeswoman Hillary Foose said.

"I can't speak for the sheriff or his office, but public transportation is not a controlled environment, and it is not intended for this kind of use."

Deputy City Manager David Krietor, who oversees aviation and other city units, said that Phoenix would have preferred to deal with the dispute directly rather than learning of it via press release.

Still, he said, the top priority is making sure "law enforcement can operate effectively at the airport."

Allen said the issue may not be free parking, but the number of spaces the department is assured. Con Rail stays in business until a deal is worked out.

The office moved one prisoner by rail Tuesday, none Wednesday and possibly may do a few more today.

Allen said the worst criminals are moved by private vehicles, so rail passengers shouldn't worry.

"No one can usually tell who the deputy is and who the prisoner is," she said.

Via AZcentral

Cardinals are the Ultimate Underdog

Cue the music and give us steep steps to climb - a Rocky moment is building for Super Bowl XLIII.

The Arizona Cardinals entered the playoffs channeling the likes of Rodney Dangerfield, who got no respect. Las Vegas bookies placed 40-1 odds on the Cardinals winning the Super Bowl.

But much like last year's New York Giants or an upstart, first-term senator announcing two years ago that he would run for president, the Cards have proved one thing: Never rule out the little guy.

After being dismissed as hopeless losers, the Cards now bask in a media frenzy and tap into a phenomenon embedded in the nation's psyche. It's rooting for the underdog, the all-things-are-possible dream.

The love of an underdog is "hard-wired into the American soul, maybe the human soul," said Robert Thompson, a professor of pop culture at Syracuse University.

The United States has no history of dukes and peasants. It's a place where the people are created equal and where six-decade losers can meet on the field with the seven-time Super Bowl Steelers.

The underdog Cards now play for the man just handed a pink slip, the girl never asked to a prom and the fans in bitterly cold places like Cleveland who hold onto slivers of hope that maybe some day they can be champions, too.

It's a storyline that never grows old.

The tale of the shepherd boy with a sling shot who brought down a giant has been told for centuries.

Children are weaned on The Little Engine That Could.

And sportscaster Al Michaels' "Do you believe in miracles?" line still brings goose bumps nearly three decades after the U.S. hockey team brought the mighty Soviets to their knees.

No silver spoon

Mike Eruzione, captain of the 1980 Olympic hockey team, said that it is "easy to be born with a silver spoon in your mouth and be successful."

The beauty, Eruzione said, is in succeeding when it's not expected.

The reason is simple, he said.

All of us, at some point, are told we aren't big enough, not good enough, not fast enough.

The Cardinals, with a storied underdog pedigree, have heard it all.

In December, sports analysts pegged the team as the weakest in the playoffs. The Cards' opponents were favored in every postseason game.

The team's leader, quarterback Kurt Warner, could probably carry the underdog banner all by himself.

Many believed the Hall of Fame contender came to the desert in 2005 to fade away after his glory years in St. Louis.

The team has had just two winning seasons since moving to Arizona in 1988 - and that counts this year's run.

Founded in 1898, the team is the oldest operating NFL franchise, and, until now, was among six teams never to play in a Super Bowl.

In all of sports, only baseball's curse-ridden Chicago Cubs, at 100 years and counting, have had a worse streak of bad luck.

Trash talk inspires

Cardinals players repeatedly have said the trash talk only inspires them. And, in each playoff game, they proved it.

"It's just fuel for our fire," said Adrian Wilson, whose eight years with the Cardinals make him the veteran of this season's roster.

Eruzione buys that. The only things underdogs must believe in are themselves and their team, the hockey legend said.

"We weren't concerned about the Soviets or the Swedes. We were confident in our system," he said. "You're all in this together."

If his words ring familiar, it's strikingly close to the Cardinals' "We do this together" mantra, which the team launched this season.

Outside support

In Tampa, players and fans should find that residents there have some affinity for the red birds.

The region hosting this year's Super Bowl has seen recent sports success: the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won the Super Bowl in 2003, the Tampa hockey team won the Stanley Cup in 2004 and the Tampa Bay Rays played in the World Series this past fall.

Still, decades of futility preceded the glory. The Bucs hold an NFL record for the longest losing streak: 26 games.

St. Petersburg resident Billy Beattie advised Arizona fans to enjoy the moment: "You never know when it's going to come around again."

The Cardinals weren't on his list of likely champions weeks ago, but Beattie has changed his mind.

"I'm not picking against them anymore," he said.

Still, naysayers abound.

The Steelers were favored by 7 points when Valley resident Phil Cisneros recently walked into the sports book at the Orleans casino in Las Vegas. The Florida-bound season-ticket holder said he savors those odds.

"That's right where they want to be," Cisneros said of his beloved Cards. "When you're the underdog and then prove people wrong, it's that much more of a victory."

He and his wife roasted for years in the bleachers of the team's former home at Sun Devil Stadium, much like Cleveland fans weathered brutal cold on the shores of Lake Erie to support their Browns.

Matt McMahon, whose late father was one of the original members of the Browns' "Dawg Pound," said the Cardinals give hope that "in my lifetime," the Browns may make a Super Bowl, too.

On Sunday, McMahon will cheer for the Cardinals, in part because they are the underdogs, but as a Clevelander, "you can't root for the Steelers anyway," he said.

Or can we?

Loving winners

Americans may love a Cinderella story, but the reality is that Americans love a winner, too, said Thompson, the pop-culture guru from Syracuse.

An underdog by definition is likely to lose.

Thompson predicts Super Bowl XLIII won't come close to touching the 97.5 million viewers who tuned into last year's game in Glendale to watch two powerhouses, the undefeated New England Patriots and the New York Giants.

The Cardinals just aren't that well known, Thompson said.

Then again, he added, few people going to the Lake Placid Olympics thought one way or the other about the U.S. hockey team.

The Economy to Put Damper on FBR Open Festivities

The Valley's signature sporting event - the rowdy FBR Open - takes center stage here this week, but there are signs that the gloomy economic backdrop will produce a less exuberant and free-spending show than has been the tradition.

Corporate cutbacks on the party tab at the TPC Scottsdale, the death of a performer during a Tuesday event, and lower-than-usual attendance during the first three days of preliminaries have conspired to put a damper on the start of the tournament, but promoters nonetheless expect a strong turnout of a half-million high-spirited golf fans.

The Open tees off today and runs through Sunday.

Corporate sponsors say they will be spending less on their tourney festivities, and that, in turn, is likely to reduce the number of partying guests attending at corporate expense.

The FBR isn't the only victim of this trend.

Golf tournaments, college bowl games and other sporting events are all feeling the economic pinch, said Robert Canton, a director of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.

The firm's sports and tourism division anticipates a 20 percent dip in spending - fan and corporate - in Tampa for Super Bowl XLIII with the Cardinals and Pittsburgh Steelers.

"Sports are not immune to these challenges we're experiencing," Canton said. Yet the events still provide an economic boost to their host cities, even if they are scaled back, he added.

A 2007 study by Arizona State University's Sports Business Programs estimated that out-of-town visitors spent a combined $62 million during their trips to attend the FBR Open.

Champagne to beer

This year will see a decline in visitors at the Open. The numbers already tell the tale: Estimated attendance during preliminary events Monday through Wednesday was 62,500, down by nearly a third from the 91,201 who attended during the same period last year.

Spending also is diminishing as sponsors host fewer clients, pay for fewer spots in the pro-am events and generally operate on a beer - instead of a champagne - entertainment budget. It could all add up to less revenue for the hosting Thunderbirds and their charities, which received a PGA Tour record $8.6 million last year.

Spending restraint starts with the title sponsor, FBR Capital Markets Corp., and filters down to other sponsors, including US Airways and Avnet Inc.

FBR, based in Arlington, Va., and its parent company, the Friedman, Billings, Ramsey Group Inc., have been rocked by heavy losses. The FBR Group's stock price has fallen as low as 6 cents per share from a high of $3.68 in the past year. Its third-quarter losses totaled $169 million. Still, FBR executives have assured the Thunderbirds that the financial company intends to honor its sponsorship contract through 2012.

But FBR executives said they would be doing less entertaining at this year's event.

Fewer Open invites

Tempe-based US Airways slashed its sponsorship of the Open about five years ago and is scaling back a little more this year, said Kathi Overkamp, company manager of special events and client hospitality.

US Airways has invited about 1,500 people to its hospitality tent, including corporate travel managers, travel agents and some of its most-frequent fliers.

In the past, attendees often had a choice of VIP tents to attend at the Open. This year, with fewer corporations hosting parties, far more clients are taking the airline up on its invitation, Overkamp said.

"I'm out of passes," she said. "People laugh when I tell them I can put them on a stand-by list."

Meanwhile, the Thunderbirds say that new sponsors have stepped in to replace companies that had to cut back or eliminate their sponsorships.

"We're sympathetic to what's going on out there," tournament chairman John Felix said.

The Open, which is the best-attended tournament on the PGA Tour, will be pressed to reach last year's record attendance, estimated at more than 538,000. That number got a boost from the Valley hosting the Super Bowl.

The Thunderbirds hope to capitalize on the upbeat mood the Cardinals have sparked in Arizona with their first Super Bowl appearance on Sunday.

"I just feel we will really benefit from that," he said. "Everyone could use something to celebrate."

The chilly weather early in the week is expected to give way to temperatures in the low 70s at the Scottsdale golf course.

"From what I can tell, people are still planning on coming out," Felix said. "This is our community's signature event. It's our Kentucky Derby, our Indy 500."

Via AZcentral

Daily Deals: Get Smart


Amazon’s Gold Box Deal of the Day is Get Smart: The Complete Series Gift Set for only $67.99, 66% off the $200 MSRP. The set includes all 138 original episodes on 25 DVD discs. The deal is only good until the end of the day.

Via /Film

Sheriff Arpaio Petitions For Emails

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio filed a petition for special action this week with the Arizona Court of Appeals in the hopes that the court would force Maricopa County Superior Court administrators to turn over a series of e-mail sheriff's investigators requested more than a year ago.

The sheriff's original request for e-mail, memos and notes from Judge Barbara Mundell, Adult Probation Administrator Barbara Broderick and Superior Court employee Jessica Funkhouser came in December 2007, as the Sheriff's Office was at odds with the court system over Arpaio's decision to curtail inmate-visitation hours.

That decision was overturned in Superior Court but ultimately upheld in the Court of Appeals.

Arpaio said he hoped the appeals court would force the Superior Court to turn over the documents requested under the Arizona Public Records Law.

"It looks like this court wants to put itself above the law instead of doing their job, which is enforcing the law," Arpaio said after his attorney filed the petition on Monday.

A series of letters between Sheriff's Office employees and court administrator Marcus Reinkensmeyer shows the two sides negotiating over the records, and which ones investigators would have legal access to.

Reinkensmeyer offered to meet with sheriff's officials to discuss the requests last April, but the requests were ignored until December, according to Reinkensmeyer's letters, when MCSO Deputy Chief David Hendershott phoned and began discussing the sheriff's investigation of County Supervisor Don Stapley.

Sheriff's officials expect a decision within the next two weeks.


Via AZcentral

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