Photos 1-8 are Sony a7siii with the GM 135mm f1.8 the rest are Sony RX10 mkIII.
A.S. King
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Ann Coulter
Larry Greenberg says: When Alan Ball launched the HBO-series True Blood with his pilot “Strange Love” episode, he mentioned right in the script that he wanted the conservative commentator on the show to be as much like Ann Coulter as possible. How did you feel about that and about how you are portrayed, vis-a-vis vampires coming out of the coffin?
Benjamin Bratt
Bill Hader
KW: Larry Greenberg asks: What’s it like writing for South Park? Is Cartman a jerk off-camera?
BH: Oh, yeah, yes he is. [Chuckles] No, I’m basically helping thoseguys out with their ideas, but I don’t actually sit down and writeany stuff with them. The way I contribute is basically by just sitting in a room pitching ideas to Trey and he runs off and writes it. It’s a great process that’s a lot of fun and that I learn a tremendous amount from. Read more
Bow Wow
Larry Greenberg says: Tyler Perry plays so many parts in this film. Were you worried that he was going to take your role?
Bow Wow: [LOL] No, I wasn’t worried about that at all. [Laughs some more]
The “Madea’s Big Happy Family” Interview
with Kam Williams
Headline: Bow Wow’s Big Happy Bark Better than His Bite
It was clear from an early age that Shad “Bow Wow” Moss was destined for the spotlight. At just 5, he was discovered by Snoop Dogg and featured on the rap icon’s groundbreaking “Doggystyle” album. Renamed Bow Wow for his solo debut, he teamed up with chart-topping/hit-making producer Jermaine Dupri to release “Beware of Dog” in 2000, the kickoff to a string of platinum and gold albums that spawned a half-dozen #1 singles and platinum songs. Read more
Brooke Shields
Producer/director Larry Greenberg says: “Brooke, thanks for being so nice to me when I met you briefly when you were a student at Princeton. When I see the tremendous wealth of work you have done in the industry, I can’t help but wonder when you will try your hand as a director.”
Brooke Shields: “Gosh, Larry, that’s just a beautiful sentiment. I directed Chicago at the Hollywood Bowl the summer before last, and I got a bit of the bug for it. So, I’m sure that within the next few years, there will be some sort of foray into it.”
Carmen Ejogo
Larry Greenberg says: I read that your director, Salim Akil, worked with schizophrenics before he started working with actors. He asks: Did that make him a more patient director than others you have worked with?
Carmen Ejogo: Oh my God! I had no idea. But that makes sense. He is literally the calmest director I’ve ever worked with. He was so willing to step back and let us do our work without feeling that he had to interfere and tell us what to do just for the sake of looking like a director. He had such confidence in himself. So, it wouldn’t surprise me, if he’s had experience outside of the business, because he has much deeper soul than that. Working with people troubled in that way could be great training for working with actors who themselves can be a little schizophrenic at times. [Laughs]