Elvis Newsletter
Sign-up to receive daily news on Elvis by email.
Elvis Filmography
Source:
Theiapolis
Elvis Resources
Table of Content
Elvis: Relationships
From the beginning of his career, Elvis was a sex symbol who sent legions of women swooning. He had a string of girlfriends, before and after he became famous, including celebrities such as
Mamie Van Doren,
Natalie Wood, Tuesday Weld,
Cybill Shepherd,
Barbra Streisand, and
Ann-Margret.
On May 1, 1967 he married Priscilla Anne Beaulieu at the Aladdin Hotel in Las Vegas. Priscilla had been the step-daughter of Presley's commanding officer in Germany during his Army stint. Incredibly, Elvis managed to talk Priscilla's mother and step-father into allowing the underaged girl to live with him at Graceland. In her autobiography, Priscilla recounted how Elvis would stay up all night and sleep most of the day; if he wanted to go out, he'd rent out the venue so no fans would bother him. Although he would spend hours alone with her in her bedroom, Priscilla wrote that Elvis never made any advances toward her. Indeed, their wedding night was the first—and only—time they were intimate; their daughter, Lisa Marie, was born exactly nine months later on February 1, 1968. After their divorce in 1973, Lisa lived with Priscilla.
Elvis: The Hollywood Years, a 2002 biography by David Bret, claims the King was gay. Bret says Colonel Tom Parker "held secret information about a homosexual affair between Elvis and actor Nick Adams over his head like a sword. He made it clear that... if Elvis didn't toe the line, he'd let it get out. At that time, it could well have ruined his career. That is why Parker had so much control over him." Many journalists' attempts to "out" Elvis in the past were thwarted by his manager. In her book
The Intimate Life and Death of Elvis, Dee Presley, the king's stepmother, also says that Elvis had sexual encounters with men and mentions his affair with Nick Adams.
<<
Gospel music -
1969 onward >>
Table of Content
Latest Film News
Latest news on Elvis
IssuesAuthor of NY Times Limbaugh profile: "I'm a little bit defensive because I think that the liberal media takes such an unfair view of him"
In a July 4 interview preceding the publication
of his profile of radio
host Rush Limbaugh, New York Times Magazine contributor
Zev Chafets asserted on WNYC's
On the Media: "I'm not an
apologist for Rush Limbaugh, but I'm a little bit defensive because I think
that the liberal media takes such an unfair view of him." During the
interview, however, Chafets offered no support for his assertion that
"the liberal media takes such an unfair view of him."
In the interview, host Bob Garfield said:
GARFIELD: Your piece on Limbaugh was very generous, I would say
even flattering. You seem to give him a pass for his excesses. And when I'm
talking about excesses, I'm talking about ad hominem attacks, truly
mean-spirited stuff that goes way beyond satire and into the politics of
vilification, and also playing fast and loose with the truth, seizing on some
news item and grossly misrepresenting it and creating a lot of hubbub, using as
the kernel of his satire something that is just fundamentally untrue.
Chafets replied:
CHAFETS: Well, do you
have an example of that? I'm not an apologist for Rush Limbaugh, but I'm a
little bit defensive because I think that the liberal media takes such an
unfair view of him.
I hear people being vilified on the
radio on all sorts of radio stations by all sorts of people all day long. And
Limbaugh is not worse than many of the ones I hear, even on NPR. He just has a
different point of view.
In fact, Media Matters
for America has documented numerous examples in which, as Garfield noted, Limbaugh "play[ed]
fast and loose with the truth."
From the July 4 edition of WNYC's On
the Media:
GARFIELD: In less than a month, Rush Limbaugh
will celebrate his 20th year hosting The
Rush Limbaugh Show. Rush is easily the most successful radio
broadcaster, with an audience of at least 14 million people a week. He just
signed a $400-million,
eight-year re-up of his contract, making as much as all of the nightly news
anchors combined.
His political clout remains
strong, fresh off of Operation Chaos, in which he convinced Republicans to vote
for Hillary Clinton in order to prolong the bruising Democratic nomination
fight. And he hangs out with Supreme Court justices.
But 14 years after Limbaugh
was credited with ushering in the Republican revolution and the Contract with America,
is he still capable of swaying a presidential election? Zev Chafets has written
about Limbaugh for this weekend's New York
Times Magazine, and he joins us now. Zev, welcome to OTM.
CHAFETS:
Thank you. Nice to be with you.
GARFIELD: OK, first question. You are
[laughs] -- you are representing The New
York Times, the apotheosis of the Eastern liberal media elite. How
the hell did you get in to see Rush Limbaugh?
CHAFETS:
[laughs] I asked nicely and persistently.
GARFIELD: Limbaugh did get his back up with
you when you persistently questioned him about his clout. Is it your belief
that, in fact, he has begun to lose impact, maybe to the likes of Sean Hannity
or Michael Savage or any of the right-wing screamers?
CHAFETS: I
talked to Michael Harrison, who's the publisher of Talkers Magazine, which is the industry magazine, and he
told me that Limbaugh retains his position. He described him as something like
a combination of Elvis and the Beatles, as far as AM talk radio is concerned.
Jay Nordlinger, who is the
managing editor of the National Review,
told me that when he was hiring guys out of college for the National Review, they would come in and
say that they became conservatives by listening to Rush Limbaugh.
So I think that maybe his
impact is less across the spectrum than it is across generations, that there --
he's been on for 20 years. There are already people who see him as sort of the
inspiration for their conservative views and their children's conservative
views.
GARFIELD: Now, I want to come to the McCain
issue, because in order to support McCain in the upcoming election, he will
have to go after Obama.
CHAFETS:
Right.
GARFIELD: And he has already complained on
the air of how difficult it is to go after Obama lest he be tarred with the R
word.
CHAFETS:
Right.
GARFIELD: And he's clearly concerned about
this, but he's also forged a strategy. Can you tell me what that is?
CHAFETS: He
appointed his call screener, a guy whose name is James Golden and he calls Bo
Snerdley, who's an African-American, to be the official Obama criticizer. And,
of course, this is done as a way of --
GARFIELD: Laundering?
CHAFETS: No,
no, no, no, no. He's laughing at the media's sensitivities. You know, I asked
him specifically. I
said, "Are you going to have a problem with an African-American
candidate?" And he said, "No. You know, Obama is a liberal, and
I'll criticize him as a liberal," which is what he does.
GARFIELD: Your piece on Limbaugh was very generous, I would
say even flattering. You seem to give him a pass for his excesses. And when I'm
talking about excesses, I'm talking about ad hominem attacks, truly
mean-spirited stuff that goes way beyond satire and into the politics of
vilification, and also playing fast and loose with the truth, seizing on some
news item and grossly misrepresenting it and creating a lot of hubbub, using as
the kernel of his satire something that is just fundamentally untrue.
CHAFETS: Well, do
you have an example of that? I'm not an apologist for Rush Limbaugh, but I'm a
little bit defensive because I think that the liberal media takes such an
unfair view of him.
I hear people being vilified on the
radio on all sorts of radio stations by all sorts of people all day long. And
Limbaugh is not worse than many of the ones I hear, even on NPR. He just has a
different point of view.
GARFIELD: The NAACP should have a riot
rehearsal. They should get a liquor store and practice robberies?
CHAFETS: Not
my sense of humor, but it's not a lie.
GARFIELD: Did Limbaugh not say that Abu
Ghraib was no worse than a Skull and Bones initiation?
CHAFETS:
Yeah, he did. It's his opinion.
GARFIELD: Yeah. Did he not deny that genocide
was committed against the American Indian and state that the population is
higher now than it was before Christopher Columbus -- of Native Americans?
CHAFETS: I
don't know. I didn't ask him that, either. I don't know what the population was
before Christopher Columbus.
GARFIELD: Yeah, it was about 15 million and,
you know, by the 19th century, it was 250,000. I mean, that's what -- that's the numbers.
OK, now I know
you don't want to be an apologist for Rush Limbaugh or his spokesman.
CHAFETS: Right.
GARFIELD: But do you not think that he is
answerable for things that are, at minimum, offensive and obnoxious and
mean-spirited that he's -- he has said on the air?
CHAFETS: Yeah, you
know, I do think that. And I think he's answerable to the public. And I think
that for people who find him more obnoxious and more mean-spirited than other
people that they prefer to listen to, then they should answer him by turning
him off.
I wouldn't say that I see Limbaugh
as an unmixed, you know, blessing, but I do think that it's good for the
American media climate to have at least one very strong conservative Republican
voice that is heard, you know, across the country. There's more than one
today, but they're all there only because Limbaugh was the first.
GARFIELD: Well, Zev, I appreciate your time.
CHAFETS:
Hey, you're very welcome.
GARFIELD: Zev Chafets wrote about the 20th
Limbaugh-versary for The New York Times
Magazine.
Published: Wed, 09 Jul 2008 17:34:22 GMT - Source: Mediamatters.Org - Read the articleComputersInstructables.com Robot Contest
Randy of
Instructables.com writes, I want you to know about the
Instructables
and RoboGames Robot Contest. We are looking for instructions on how
to make, build or design all things robot-related. Maybe you built the
ultimate manipulator arm, designed a killer sensor array, reused some
great trash, or just made a gorgeous housing - pick something you're
proud of, and share how you made it. The grand prize is a trip to San
Francisco for the 2009 robogames. Other prizes include a RoboPhilo
Walking Android kit, and instructables Robot gear. Entry deadline is
July 13. They've already got some interesting entries like DIY air
muscles and the Elvinator
(a cross between the terminator and a WowWee Elvis robot).
Published: Tue, 01 Jul 2008 21:42:53 GMT - Source: Robots.Net - Read the articleEuropeGraceland in Grangemouth - Elvis fan does not have wooden heart
An Elvis fan from Grangemouth converts his house into Graceland for his local gala day.
Published: Fri, 20 Jun 2008 21:11:11 GMT - Source: News.Bbc.Co.Uk - Read the article
Sign-up to receive daily news on Elvis by email. See Also: