Tuesday, May 7, 2013

“Mrs. Carter World Tour” Blue Ivy on STAGE

For Beyonce, everyday is bring-your-daughter-to-work day as her 1-year-old bundle of joy often travels the world right by her side.
Everyone thought they caught a glimpse of baby Blue onstage at a recent “Mrs. Carter World Tour” stop in London, but she hasn’t caught on to the family business just yet.
The singer’s rep said, “That was a child in the audience.”
Sorry, guys.
MUST READ: Blue Ivy For President? Beyonce Tells Her Daughter She Can Be POTUS One Day
In a recent interview on “Good Morning America“, the 31-year-old entertainer and wife of hip-hop mogul Jay-Z said she is looking forward to having more children.
“I would like more children. I think my daughter needs company. I definitely love being a big sister and at some point when it’s supposed to happen. My biggest job in the world is to protect my daughter and I am very protective,” she said. “I just want to make sure that she can have a healthy, safe, normal life. I feel really, really just lucky that I can still do what I love and now have a way bigger meaning, and that’s to be her mother.”
“You know, at the end of the day, you’re the same exact person…I still like the simple things,” she said before cracking a joke about her store-bought press-on nails. “I just want happiness, and I want great friends and great family.”
Check out the cute toddler during Beyonce’s performance of “Irreplaceable” below

 Beyonce

Why do HOLLYWOOD BLOCK Buster HIT movies open to the rest of the world First

If you saw "Iron Man 3" in a North American theater this weekend and didn't have its major plot twist spoiled for you, consider yourself lucky. After all, people in nearly every movie market around the world got to see the movie a week before you did.
It's become increasingly common for Hollywood's would-be blockbusters to open all over the globe before they finally make it to our own shores. "Iron Man 3" opened in territories throughout the world on the weekend of April 26 before opening here on May 3. It follows in the footsteps of Tom Cruise's sci-fi epic "Oblivion," which also opened overseas a week before it opened here on April 19. "Star Trek Into Darkness" has already opened in some countries, a full two weeks before it opens in North America.
Not long ago, homegrown Hollywood "event movies" like these would have opened in America first, then abroad. Or they would have opened everywhere in the world on the same day, a measure that not only created worldwide hype for the films but also thwarted pirates who might have taken advantage of the release-date gap to flood a country's streets with bootleg DVDs from another country where the movie had already opened. So what changed? Why does Hollywood now make America wait to see its own movies until after they've premiered throughout the rest of the world?
More than anything else, the shift reflects how the international market, once just gravy for Hollywood, has eclipsed the domestic market as the main source of revenue for mainstream theatrical releases. As big as last year's "The Avengers" was at home ($623.4 million), it was even bigger abroad ($888.4 million). Of that foreign total, $185.1 million came in on the film's overseas opening weekend, which took place a week before the movie premiered here. So it's no wonder that Disney would repeat the strategy for "Iron Man 3."
And the strategy worked. A week ago, "iron Man 3" beat the foreign opening weekend record set by "The Avengers," earning $198.4 million. Before a single American ticketbuyer had seen it, "Iron Man 3" had earned $307.7 million. By Sunday, when Disney was reporting that the Robert Downey Jr. threequel had opened here with an enormous $175.3 million, second-weekend grosses had already driven the international earnings to $504.8 million, for a global total of $680.1 million. Not bad for ten days' work.
It's certainly reassuring for studios to know that an expensive blockbuster-hopeful is a hit even before it opens in the U.S. Universal moved "Oblivion," initially scheduled for summer, to April, setting it up to grab what it could in the two weeks before "Iron Man 3" opened. But that meant it also had to open a week earlier overseas. Which was fine; Tom Cruise movies routinely perform much better abroad than they do here, which is why Cruise remains an A-lister despite his modest box office performance in America."Oblivion" earned only about $70 million in North America in the 14 days before "Iron Man 3" opened domestically, but by then, it had earned twice as much overseas. The movie opened with $60.4 million abroad a week before its American debut netted $57.1 million. As of this weekend, "Oblivion" has earned $222.8 million worldwide, with two thirds of that coming from foreign markets.
One sign of how important these international early releases have become is the promotional travel schedules of the stars. They're sent out to tout their films around the world, often for months at a time, appearing at red-carpet premieres in multiple countries. By the time it opens here, "Star Trek Into Darkness" will have staged seven such premieres. So in some cases, these staggered release patterns are just a matter of scheduling around other factors.