The Buzz Around Gabourey Sidibe
In stepping into the lead role of "Precious," newcomer actor Gabourey Sidibe had to take on some monumental tasks.
- The 26-year-old had to play an abused, obese 16-year-old, convincingly.
- She had to be good enough to satisfy fans of a modern literary classic, the 1996 novel "Push," by Sapphire.
- She needed to hold her own with a stand-out cast that includes mega-stars like Mo'Nique, Mariah Carey, and Lenny Kravitz.
- She had to portray a character, Precious Jones, who weighs in at more than 300 pounds in a Hollywood that tends to slim down its leading ladies.
Well, mission very accomplished. The movie became a Sundance Festival favorite, building massive buzz on the Web and off. California and New York audiences talked up the film, directed by Lee Daniels (who produced "Monster's Ball"), and opening weekend searches came from about two-thirds of the nation, led by Southern states.
Monumental Buzz
Turned out Sidibe, a psychology student and receptionist, couldn't have been more perfect for the role. The New York native wasn't unfamiliar with bright lights, hanging out at the performances of her gospel-singer mom. But that hard lifestyle of constantly trying to get gigs was exactly why Sidibe aimed for a steady desk job. Her best friend convinced her to audition, and so Sidibe competed with 1,000 others testing for the part.
As The New York Times puts it, "she blew everyone away." The director fell in love ("with all my soul"). Since then, others have fallen in line. She has already received one prestigious award. Rolling Stones critic Peter Travers calls her "glorious," and her talk-show appearances literally leave people cheering.
Far From Precious
While Brooklyn-born and Harlem-raised, Sidibe's similarities to the character Precious ends there. Sidibe is one of six kids, and her mother Alice Tan Ridley is a loving teacher as well as a gospel singer—known by NYC locals as the godmother of soul of the Times Square subway station. To understand the horribly abused Precious, the college student fell into familiar academic mode and delved into research about abuse. Given all the Oscar talk around her performance, Sidibe's studying more than paid off.
Level-Headed Grownup
In a Huffington Post interview, Sidibe said she felt "immense responsibility" to do Precious justice, and that her confidence came from age (24, when she auditioned): "I know Precious because I know who I am." Sidibe keeps it real. She also said that a role model doesn't come "because I'm in a movie. My first responsibility is to my family and to myself."
Fame isn't over yet, although Sidibe understands that her background and build, atypical for Hollywood, means people make snap judgments. “I think people look at me and don’t expect much," she told an Indiewire reporter, "even though, I expect a whole lot." In her new career as an actor, Sidibe sees her new life as "an office job...and my office happens to be a red carpet or a room full of interviewers." Now that's a grownup attitude.
Buzz Multiplex Charts: Better Based on Fiction Than Fact
Top Three Movies of the Week, as ranked by Yahoo! searches
1. "Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire" (R, limited release). A film adaptation of the 1996 award-winning novel took 13 years, so little wonder that pent-up anticipation has exploded online. The searches have been phenomenal, partly helped by the directorial creds (Lee Daniels produced "Monster's Ball") and an eclectic cast (Mo'Nique, Mariah Carey, Lenny Kravitz). Plaudits are already being loaded on star Gabourey Sidibe, who takes on the unspeakable role of horribly abused, obese 16 year old. Despite the R rating, expect the females to queue up (they make up 77% of searches) where they can.
2. "The Fourth Kind" (PG-13). Milla Jovovich has carved a niche of sorts in vanquishing 15th-century English colonialists, corporate-created zombies, and the occasional evil police force. Who better (well, besides the recently departed guv) to lead a "fact-based" drama about UFOs mixing it up with Alaskans. The film has hoax written all over it, but viral marketing helps it snag the No. 2 slot (and inspire searches like "nome alaska abductions" and "alien abduction"). Now let's see if the 13-44 year olds crowd will actually pay for a ticket. Except in Alaska: The movie's evidently not showing there.
3. "The Men Who Stare At Goats" (R). Even more fact-based than Nome abductions, the spoof checks out elite psychics practicing their skills on behalf of military intelligence (so to speak). Ewan McGregor plays the reporter checking out mind-reading warrior George Clooney. Kevin Spacey and Jeff Bridges add to the over-40 powerhouse crew (well, McGregor's 38). Quirky title aside, the critics aren't just mostly unimpressed—they're making bleating noises. Well, at least fainting goats are getting some online love.
Buzz Multiplex: This Is It
This, indeed, is it. The Buzz Multiplex has been cleared of all wide releases, as Michael Jackson's posthumous concert film continues to gain momentum. The massive online attention supports predictions that "Michael Jackson's This Is It" will be the "highest-grossing music documentary" to date and may even have Oscar potential.
The Wednesday premiere drew in more than $20 million around the world, and the film title continues to be entrenched in the top 700 searches on Yahoo!.
While some observers think Halloween might dampen box-office numbers, holiday celebrants will be paying their tribute to the late singer in many ways: "michael jackson costumes" have topped October costume searches on Yahoo!. That's not all: Expect weekend parties to pass out "michael jackson pumpkin pattern" for carving, play "michael jackson games," and practice the "michael jackson moonwalk."
Below, the online preparations that have been underway for a Jackson tribute:
Top 10 Michael Jackson Searches of the Week, as ranked by Yahoo! searches
- Michael Jackson This Is It
- Michael Jackson Videos
- Michael Jackson Songs
- Michael Jackson Thriller
- Michael Jackson This Is It Song
- Jackson 5
- Michael Jackson Lyrics
- Michael Jackson Thriller Video
- Michael Jackson Billie Jean
- Michael Jackson Beat It
Filed under: Movies, Music, Holidays, Celebrities, Halloween, Dead Celebrities, Michael Jackson
Buzz Multiplex Charts: Aviatrix vs. the Freaks
The culture wars are on in the Buzz Multiplex. Will the box office fall to torturous horror or vampire interns? Or will the fearless flying female uplift ticket sales? Turns out this may be a weekend when each generation gets its own outing. Who doesn't make the top 3: The boy superhero with the cowlick.
Top Three Movies of the Week, as ranked by Yahoo! searches
1. "Amelia" (PG). Director Mira Nair, known for smaller films, landed the mega-biopic assignment of aviatrix Amelia Earheart...but some critics don't think the story ever quite took off. The allure of Amelia is strong, but mostly among people ages 35 on up, which might not bode well for big box-office receipts. Star Hilary Swank might make the difference.
2. "Saw VI" (R). A sickening indulgence, or a covert way to teach Roman numerals? Unlike "Amelia," the under-30 set is all over inventive ways to off victims in modern-day villainous occupations. Expect a "Saw" DVD marathon weekend, given the online nostalgia. This ranks as the teen-boys-sneaking-in-or-get-cool-older-brother-as-"guardian" movie of the week.
3. "Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant" (PG-13). Comedy + bloodsuckers + circus freaks = child-friendly, if not teen-frenzy inducing. And we didn't even mention the Salma Hayek as Bearded Lady factor. Adapted from the book series, the tale of a teenager who joins the freakiest circus on earth gets the love from the under-18 crowd.
How Real Is “The Fourth Kind”?
"The Fourth Kind" is one of those horror mystery flicks that bills itself as a "fact-based thriller." Set in Nome, Alaska, the movie seeks to explain the supposed mystery of an unusually high missing-persons rate in that area. The film says it re-enacts, documentary-style, actual footage of alien abductees. But the real mystery may be: How real is the movie? The Buzz Log investigates.
First of all, what exactly is the fourth kind?
According to the movie, a scale developed back in 1972 was designed to measure alien encounters. (Remember "Close Encounters of the Third Kind"? That's the scale. ) UFO sighting is the first kind. Evidence is the second kind. Contact with extra terrestrials is the third. And the fourth kind? You guessed it: abduction.
The set up
The teaser trailer, which opens with its star, Milla Jovovich, claiming that everything you're about to see is true, has the Web buzzing. Searches on "the fourth kind" have surged 200% in the last seven days. Thrill seekers have also been looking up "the fourth kind movie" and "the fourth kind trailer." The official site encourages believers to post their abduction experiences on Facebook and Twitter, and lists Web resources for further reading on the topic of UFOs. Insert "X-Files" soundtrack here.
How real is it?
Depends on your definition of the word "real." On the scale of documentaries, from Ken Burns yawn-inducing historical to fake-umentary "Blair Witch Project," guess which one this is. The story is set around psychiatrist Abagail Tyler, a supposedly real person who interviewed sleep-deprived patients claiming they were abducted by aliens.
The movie promises that the scenes were all recreated from "archival footage." Except. Actual Nome residents say they've never heard of any alien abductions. And the Anchorage Daily News does a pretty good job debunking the story (including the observation that no psychiatrist exists by that name.) The accounts of alien abductions are said to explain an unusually high death and disappearance rate. The FBI blamed alcoholism. Locals said it was a serial killer. Nobody seems to blame aliens.
But hey, who really cares if the back story doesn't add up if it's a good scare? Fear junkies screamed their way through "Paranormal Activity," helping the DIY horror flick mint $30 million in just three weeks.
Makers of "The Fourth Kind" must be hoping to capture some of that scare appeal. Clearly, they are the believers.
Filed under: Movies
top movers
| Rank | Subject | 1-Day Move |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nidal Malik Hasan | Breakout! |
| 2 | Fort Hood Shooting | Breakout! |
| 3 | Tyrannosaurus Rex | Breakout! |
| 4 | Fort Hood | 43518% |
| 5 | Tropical Storm Ida | 4377% |
| 6 | Willie Aames | 3325% |
| 7 | Shannon Dedrick | 3299% |
| 8 | Gretchen Rossi | 2702% |
| 9 | Epic Mickey | 2583% |
| 10 | Lee Harvey Oswald | 1907% |

top leaders
| Rank | Subject | Move | Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Danica Patrick | +194 | 207 |
| 2 | Fort Hood | +185 | 185 |
| 3 | Angelina Jolie | +114 | 164 |
| 4 | Rihanna | +39 | 157 |
| 5 | New York Yankees | +54 | 154 |
| 6 | Alicia Keys | +139 | 153 |
| 7 | +1 | 153 | |
| 8 | NFL | +6 | 138 |
what's the buzz?
A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.
For more detailed information, visit our FAQ.
