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Chronology
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New York, London

Acting meets accounting fraud? Dancing to the tune of financial deception? An Arthur Andersen-styled musical featuring Jeff Skilling, bean-counters gone bad and manipulative energy traders hardly seems the stuff for a song-and-dance stage hit.

But, as former Enron prosecutor Andrew Weissmann told Bloomberg, “When I heard they were making a musical about the company, I thought, what a joke. It’ll be like ‘Springtime for Hitler’.” Times Online writer Lucy Prebble thought otherwise and mixed derivatives and hedge funds into a tragic musical resplendent with light-sabre dances and dinosaurs. She believes the songs and scams will capture audience attention. Strangely enough, she’s right and is now one of the few people to profit from the downturn. The global recession forms a fitting context for English theatre fans who’re going in their droves to feast on… More

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US, UK

Exactly 30 years ago, one of the world's best directors of all time, Alfred Hitchcock, died in Los Angeles. Or so we’ve been told. For all we know, he might be somewhere between worlds, plotting his next mystery wrapped in an enigma inside a riddle.

For years, from the mid-1960s onward, the spooky melody of Charles Gunoud’s “Funeral March of a Marionette” drew television viewers into their lounges to watch “Alfred Hitchcock Presents”. In South Africa we’ve only seen episodes as re-runs or hired them, but they’ve still galvanised us. In the famous opening sequence, the camera fades to a simple line-drawing caricature of Hitchcock's rotund profile and, as the music plays, the master, himself, appears in silhouette from the edge of the screen, walks to centre screen, replaces the caricature and says, in his unforgettably ghoulish voice, “Go-o-o-d e-ev-e-ning….” Watch: North by Northwest trailer… More

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World of Politics

Gordon Brown's latest gaffe is a classic example of a politician under pressure, fighting for his political life. And he's not the first, or the last, to forget his microphone is still on.

Thursday night is Britain’s final televised, three-way political debate in the run-up to voting on 6 May. It’s an increasingly furious election campaign. And, following a little moment near Manchester recently, everyone will be on the edges of their seats, waiting, ready to pounce on incumbent Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s next gaffe. Brown’s opponents, David Cameron of the Tories and Nick Clegg of the newly resurgent Liberal Democrats, certainly will be prepped and ready should another toad pop out of Brown’s mouth. By now, in an age when virtually everything a politician says is photographed, taped, recorded, Brown and… More

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19th Century Europe

Exactly 200 years ago, the man many consider the greatest composer of all time, wrote a little piano piece that has since become well-known to just about everyone else living on this planet. The man: Ludwig van Beethoven. The piece: Für Elise.

Almost all of us carry around a vivid mental picture of Ludwig van Beethoven. He’s the guy with the scowl and the wild head of wavy hair. He’s the obsessive-compulsive composer who kept writing and writing until his compositions were, well, perfect. He’s the man who sawed off the legs of his piano so he could feel the vibrations of the notes better and who eventually needed an ear trumpet so he could hear anything at all. He’s the composer who wrote nine magnificent symphonies, a great happy-ending opera, dozens and dozens of other major works and, when he was… More

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New York

Hollywood legend Al Pacino has turned 70 and is celebrating a tour-de-force acting career by not letting up. The Oscar winner and star of “Scent of a Woman”, “The Godfather” and “Scarface” will spend this year filming “Mary, Mother of Christ” with Peter O’Toole and Camilla Belle. Let's peer back into his remarkable career.

“Say hello to my little friend!” Anyone who’s ever loved Al Pacino has the exact tone, tenor and delivery of those six words etched into their memory. Bursting through an office door as Tony Montana brandishing an M16 assault rifle with an M203 grenade launcher fitted, Pacino stormed into legend by creating one of the most famous lines in cinematic history. Watch: Al Pacino, Scarface Written by Oliver Stone and directed by Brian de Palma, the movie’s tagline read: “He was Tony Montana. The world will remember him by another name...SCARFACE.” If the movie marketers of Scarface wanted to go… More

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Earth's orbit

It’s been 20 years since the Hubble Space Telescope blasted into space, taking mankind’s collective scientific dreams on a journey that’s been anything but smooth sailing. In fact, it’s been more like a soap opera in space, studded with high drama, broken equipment, a bleary-eyed primary mirror and a dramatic Shuttle rescue mission. But also, some awe-inspiring images and a much better understanding of the Universe.

“The early years were a rollercoaster ride,” Hubble scientist Richard Hook told The Daily Maverick from Munich, Germany. A Hubble data analyst with the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere, Hook says the exhilaration of Hubble’s launch on 24 April 1990 was quickly followed by despair. “After the excitement of the launch in 1990, came the crushing disappointment of the discovery of an optical problem with the telescope's main mirror,” said Hook. Despite clever processing tricks by top scientists to try to fix the images, it was clear that much of Hubble's power was lost - unless… More

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ST. PETERSBURG, MOSCOW and the rest of the former Socialist International

The man who followed Marx's teachings with a proletarian revolution, Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov Lenin, was born exactly 140 years and two days ago. Although he was a creator of the largest-ever state in Earth’s history, his was a comparatively short life that ended after 54 tumultuous years; loved by a large chunk of humanity and reviled by an even bigger one.

Perhaps you remember a wonderfully nostalgic, gentle, but wickedly funny German film that took us to the eastern half of Berlin, just before the collapse of communism. As the story unfolds, a young man's mother has suffered a stroke and has lapsed into a coma. While in her coma, the Berlin Wall falls, East Germany's communist regime falls, and the country itself disappears, suddenly united with West Germany. To cushion her from the shock of the new as she slowly recovers, the woman's dutiful son creates a faux reality around her of old East German household products and handcrafted, but… More

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Coachella

South African zef-rap duo Die Antwoord were a hit on Saturday at one of the most prestigious music festivals on Earth. Typically, they gave no interviews…or rather, everyone thought they gave no interviews, until a twenty-minute clip appeared on Boing Boing. Watch it and cringe.

It’s boring already to try deconstruct them. The long, essayistic, heavily-referenced-with-pop-culture thing has been done, and some of the pieces have been outstanding (Richard Poplak’s at The Walrus, for instance), but it’s time now to move on. Die Antwoord, at some point, must simply be what they are. Neil Pendock of all people, the wine columnist for the Sunday Times, manages to say in a single sentence at the tail-end of an article about brandy what feted correspondents for famous music magazines take three-thousand words to say: “Die Antwoord embrace the sophisticated philosophy of the late Jean Baudrillard, who insisted… More

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Cape Town

It’s been a long road from Mowbray Kaap. But now that Freshlyground are singing the Fifa 2010 anthem (with Shakira), they could just hit the big time. And maybe local artists will stop complaining about their lack of opportunities during the World Cup.

It’s Time for Africa - that’s the name of 2010 World Cup anthem, by Freshlyground and Columbian pop diva Shakira, that’s expected to hit the airwaves next week. Freshlyground made the announcement on Friday, though so far there’s a lack of information. Did the band have any input in writing the song or will they merely perform it? How long have they been in negotiations with Fifa? Who will own the copyright to the  music? (Okay, given Fifa’s tendency to slap a trademark on anything remotely connected to soccer or the 2010 tournament, it’s not too hard to come up… More

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Cape Canaveral, Florida

Kirk: “Scotty – I need more power, we have to get to Mars before the midterm elections!”
Scott: “Captain – the engines kanna take any mora strain”
Kirk: “Scotty – the other captains are gathering, telling me that we’re not moving fast enough and that the people of Florida are revolting...”

Well, okay, that isn’t a real snippet of dialogue from Star Trek, but it might well have served as the emotional (and political) backdrop for US President Barack Obama’s visit and speech at the Kennedy Space Center. Dissenting forcefully from the charge that he is drawing down America’s human spaceflight program, Obama strove to realign the country’s next space goals towards Mars and the asteroid belt instead of a return to the Moon to walk in our own footprints. As Obama said, “The bottom line is, nobody is more committed to manned spaceflight, to human exploration of space than I… More

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UFO, Earth, and wherever else deities are

From seedy earthly crimes to unearthly theories about spacemen and the origins of life, Erich von Däniken has done and undone most things, and amassed a fortune – all before his 75th birthday.

Erich Anton Paul von Däniken was born 75 years ago in Zofingen, Switzerland. After a series of less-than-successful careers, he hit on the idea of writing about the purported extraterrestrial origins of life on Earth and those durable ancient astronauts with his 1968 book, The Chariots of the Gods. As a result, Von Däniken became both world famous (and rich) and outrageously controversial. Adored and abhorred by many too. "Chariots” and his subsequent 25 books have been translated into numerous languages and have sold more than 62 million copies, demonstrating to 10 figures that literacy is not necessarily the same… More

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SPACE - Between EARTH and MOON

Men had died in space programmes before Apollo 13, and men and women have perished since. But Apollo 13’s victory over mechanical failure became an enduring legend of the extraordinary ingenuity of humans to improvise their survival in truly life-threatening circumstances.

Commanded by Nasa space veteran James Lovell, with John “Jack” Swigert as command module pilot and Fred Haise as the lunar module pilot, the rocket left Cape Kennedy on 11 April 1970, with a crew intent on being the third group to reach the Moon. But, two days later, the crew members heard a sharp bang and Swigert uttered the phrase into the radio that has become a metaphor for failure that tests the soul: “Houston, we've had a problem.” The 1995 film, Apollo 13 gave us the slightly different version, “Houston, we have a problem.” This has become one… More

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ORANGE PARK, FLORIDA

Meinhardt Raabe, the man who, as the Munchkin coroner, proclaimed that the Wicked Witch of the East was “really most sincerely dead”, has also died at the age of 94.

He was one of a handful of surviving actors and actresses who played all those Munchkins in the legendary film “The Wizard of Oz” released in 1939 - and he was the last surviving Munchkin who had had any dialogue in the film. The caregiver at his assisted-living home, Cindy Bosnyak, said of Raabe that, even at 94, “he had a headful of hair… he remembered everything every day. To me he was a walking history book, very alert”. Watch: CBS News: "Wizard of Oz" Munchkin Actor Dies Back in 1938, Raabe joined 124 other very short actors and actresses… More

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Switzerland

The former manager of the Sex Pistols, the New York Dolls and the man considered by many to be the godfather of punk-rock, Malcolm McLaren, died in Switzerland on Thursday. Despite his Scottish name, he was a London Jewish guy of many talents and an impresario of some genius.

McLaren was most famous for his relationship with the Sex Pistols. Their violence, swearing and general anarchy shocked Britain, but created a revolution in the rock universe. The band’s chaotic presence was largely due to McLaren’s indisputable flair for self-promotion. “Without Malcolm McLaren there would not have been any British punk,” noted rock music chronicler Jon Savage. Before the music became his special message, McLaren was a fashion guru and the clothing shop he ran with girlfriend Vivienne Westwood gave him a close-up window on the emerging punk scene. The store went through many changes as its name morphed from… More

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Pretoria, Johannesburg

After Malema’s eviction of a BBC journalist from a press conference, whose reaction made the most sense – the National Press Club’s or the ANC Youth League’s? We’ll leave the answers to you.

If ever there was a press conference that called on the South African media to define itself, this was it. And the National Press Club, founded in 1975 as the Pretoria Press Club, made the statement in obdurate terms. Faced with one Julius Malema, a man not yet thirty years old, the organisation drew on the experience of its years. In measured yet firm language, it expressed its dissatisfaction with the ruling party’s youth wing. Politicians could not publicly call journalists “bastards”, it said, and should they do so, all journalists present should protest by leaving the room immediately. Here,… More

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The Vatican & almost everywhere

After a few weeks of public humiliation, the Roman Catholic Church is now effectively having to choose its corporate model: will it be Toyota or the makers of Tylenol?

Over the past few months the Catholic Church has been at the sharp end of appalling charges that it condoned or ignored decades of child abuse at the hands of the very priests it had placed in positions of authority over children or responsibility for their religious education - in Ireland, America, Germany, Austria and a growing number of other nations as well. To respond to these charges, Pope Benedict XVI’s personal priest, Reverend Raniero Cantalamessa, used his Good Friday sermon of all places to assert that investigative journalists digging into charges of priestly paedophile abuses were the functional equivalent… More

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REALLY DEEP, DEEP UNDER THE FRENCH & SWISS ALPS

Deep under the French and Swiss Alps, a beast finally came to life on Tuesday. It cost $10 billion to build and is supposed to help solve humanity's fundamental questions about life, the universe and everything. Or, according to various prophets of doom, it could also destroy life, the universe and everything.

“…Stein turned to look at his top research assistant, Slithey Toves*, and marvelled – all those brains and beauty in one person. A marvel of evolution, for sure. Toves had written that masterful PhD about alternate states of matter, although he was glad he had talked her out of speculating on collapses into meta-vacuum states – it was pure science fiction, that bit. Really out of place in a sombre thesis on primordial proton formation in the first microseconds after the Big Bang. Stein, frequently called Dr Monster because of his fearsome reputation in the global physics community, every bit… More

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EVANSTON, Illinois

Donald Frey, the man who created the Mustang, the stylish, yet affordable Ford that became an automotive icon in the 1960s and 70s, died this month at the age of 86. The Mustang, of course, became one of the most successful product launches in automotive history.

Even though the guts of the model came from other Fords like the dumpy Falcon’s basic chassis, the Mustang quickly developed a unique identity that baby-boomers embraced in their eagerness for new looks and experiences. It had a touch of elegance borrowed from European sports cars, and it featured that distinctive galloping mustang - right smack in the middle of its grille that owners (and everyone else who lusted after one) thought was really, really cool. Whenever the car was in a film, it was the centre of attraction. Steve McQueen - Steve McQueen no less - was nearly upstaged… More

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South Africa

On its own terms, Wednesday’s online campaign protesting the ANC Youth League’s disregard for media freedom has been an unqualified triumph. The day has also been an important one for South African social media. Wouldn’t it be great, though, if there could also be a real-world victory?  

Digital activism, if it’s to be worthy of the name, needs to be measured by its results in the offline world. On Wednesday March 24, the same day that Sipho Hlongwane made South African Web history by organising what appears to be the country’s largest ever online protest, digiactive.org announced the “crushing” of giant corporation Nestle by online green activists. The site was not engaging in hyperbole: aside from 122,000 views of a Greenpeace Youtube video, which shows an office worker finding an orangutan finger in a KitKat wrapper, 90,000 protesters took over Nestle’s Facebook page, thereby creating, according to… More

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Movies

Over the last 100 years the global movie realm has been inhabited by many heroes and artists. But few of them could honestly count themselves in the same league as the genius from Japan, Akira Kurosawa.

For most people, outside Japan that is, Japanese films boil down to just three words: anime, Godzilla - and Kurosawa. The first is those animated, futuristic cartoons that have a cult following around the world; the second is an imaginary monster called up from atomic nightmares that has repeatedly destroyed a cardboard version of Tokyo. The third, of course, is one of the world’s towering film makers of the 20th century. Akira Kurosawa was born exactly 100 years ago today and over his long career he made some 30 films, ultimately receiving one of those lifetime Academy Awards “for cinematic… More

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US

The show is a modern-day Citizen Kane, according to its director Larry Charles. Yeah, maybe he’s biased, but when you’ve got the guy behind the Fake Steve Jobs franchise writing the pilot episode, it’s hard to be a doubter.

In 2007 Daniel Lyons wrote a book called Options: The Secret Life of Steve Jobs. It was written in the first person, as if Lyons really were Steve Jobs. The prologue begins with this so-called Steve Jobs explaining how famous (“like People magazine famous”) and good-looking (“I’m lean and handsome, with close-trimmed hair and a Sean Connery-esque salt and pepper beard”) he is. Then, in the second paragraph, Lyons/Jobs gets to the point. “What’s even cooler is that I’m not famous for being some steroid-taking action movie star or illiterate dick-grabbing rapper or moronic freak-of-nature basketball player. I’m famous for… More

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US, World

For years, the enemies of the globe’s biggest power were clearly, and visibly, recruited from the Muslim countries, or were in some way connected to them. But, as the latest incidents show, terrorism’s front-line soldiers could also come from the places that are as American as apple pie.

Let’s imagine you work as a Homeland Security officer at Kennedy Airport in New York City. An unending stream of humanity inches towards your duty station – looking forward to a business deal, some tourism, a family reunion… or something originally horrific and previously unimaginable. A conscientious staffer, you take your responsibility seriously to keep potential terrorists out of the country. 9/11 is not an abstract thing for you. You’ve read the advisories and guidelines; you follow the protocols for checking passports, fingerprints, the hundreds of thousands of names on terrorist watch-lists and databases without fail – this is important… More

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World

There appears to be something profound about a design method that copies nature, even for people who aren’t big fans of reflexology or wheatgrass. Maybe, just maybe, biomimicry can do YOU a favour.

“If I could reveal anything that is hidden from us, at least in modern cultures, it would be to reveal something that we’ve forgotten, that we used to know as well as we knew our own names. And that is that we live in a competent universe, that we are part of a brilliant planet. And that we are surrounded by genius.” Speaking for myself, it’s round about now that I start looking for the exit signs.  “Biomimicry is a new discipline that tries to learn from those geniuses and take advice from them, design advice. That’s where I live”… More

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LONDON

A decade in the making, Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom sequel “Love Never Dies”, opened this week in London to some decidedly unfriendly reviews. Later this year, it will transfer its “magic” to New York City.

This time around there is no heart-stopping chandelier crash, no underground gondola beneath the Paris Opera. Why? Well, because the Phantom has taken up residence in Coney Island, New York City’s venerable seaside amusement park. Really. “The Phantom of the Opera” has been on stage on the West End, on Broadway and pretty much everywhere else since 1984. In the preceding 25 years it has been seen by more than 100 million people – and that doesn’t include the film version. You might have thought that after such career-defining, mega-success, composer Andrew Lloyd Webber would have let the Phantom retire… More

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Tibet

On March 10 1959, Tibetan nationalists rose up against their Chinese occupiers in a revolt that was quickly crushed. During the week of March 10 to March 14 2008, the Tibetans exacted a bloody revenge. It’s an anniversary the world now watches closely.

Exactly two years ago, on March 10 2008, three hundred or so monks from Drepung Monastery made their way slowly toward the centre of Lhasa, about eight kilometres to the east. It was the anniversary of the failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule, and as in previous years, the expectation was that the monks would calmly call for Tibet’s independence before retreating. Instead, they came with specific demands – one being that the Chinese authorities release five monks imprisoned in October 2007 for celebrating the US’s award of the Congressional Gold Medal to the Dalai Lama. The monks were stopped… More

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Global event

It's a bad joke, but we'll repeat it anyway. Q: How do you tell Chuck Norris's age? A: Cut him in half and count the rings. The man who almost beat Bruce Lee in battle is seventy-years-old on Wednesday, would you believe. We at The Daily Maverick wanted to be the first to wish him happy birthday.

There are way more than two websites that celebrate the sophisticated ouvre of Chuck Norris, but only two seem to do it with the zeal and professionalism of the man himself. The first is chucknorrisfacts.com and the second is chucknorrisjokes.net. On the first you have biographical details like "According to Einstein's theory of relativity, Chuck Norris can actually roundhouse kick you yesterday," "Chuck Norris sleeps with a pillow under his gun," and "Some people wear Superman pyjamas, Superman wears Chuck Norris pyjamas." On the second you have one-liners like "Chuck Norris does not wear a condom because there is no… More

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UK

Poland's Ryszard Kapuscinski was once voted the greatest journalist of the twentieth century, even though the factual ambiguity in his books had long been debated. A new biography appears to confirm the great writer's blurring of the divide between reportage and fiction. Should we think less of him?

An exercise: read the following extract from Another Day of Life, Ryszard Kapuscinski's non-fiction account of the atmosphere in Luanda after the Portuguese exodus of 1975, and try to remain unmoved: "When the army left, the dogs began to go hungry and slim down. For a while they drifted around the city in a desultory mob, looking for a handout. One day they disappeared. I think they followed the human example and left Luanda, since I never came across a dead dog afterwards, though hundreds of them had been loitering in front of the general headquarters and frolicking in front… More

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Los Angeles

The most commercially successful movie of all time ($2.5 billion and counting), Avatar, was not a match for a small little independent movie about the US Army explosive ordnance disposal team during the Iraqi War, which was made on a shoestring budget. There is still justice in this world.

The Hurt Locker director, and James Cameron's former wife, Kathryn Bigelow has shattered one of the last remaining glass ceilings, becoming the first woman to win the Academy Award for Best Director. The Hurt Locker won six Awards, including the most important ones, for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay. It also took the gold statuettes for Best Sound Mixing, Best Sound Editing and Best Film Editing. James Cameron was decidedly not the king of the world this time. Avatar did walk away with three Oscars, but they were mostly for mastery of film science, where they really… More

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Johannesburg

South Africa's longest-running soap opera is to air for the last time on Tuesday, March 2nd. What, if anything, has the show done for the country? And is this really the end?

The cliffhanger is to storytelling what the goal is to football: if you don't have one, the match is short on melodrama. Not to say that you can't have a fine game of football without either team scoring; maybe a superb battle for possession takes place in midfield, or the keepers steal the show with a flawless display of their craft. Still, what the punters come to see are goals. The equivalent of a scoreless game in storytelling might be a work of literary fiction or cinema verite - the sort of thing elitists enjoy while everyone else is bored… More

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New York

ABC News is the last of the traditional big-three US news networks to implement cutbacks. On Tuesday last week, the Disney-owned organisation announced plans to retrench a quarter of its 1400-member staff. It can't be good for journalism, but the upside is that the days of the Ron Burgundy-like anchorman may finally be over.

The 1987 movie Broadcast News was a tough film to sit through for a range of reasons: the script was tedious, the acting was mediocre at best, and the narcissistic travails of the central characters weren't exactly the stuff of gripping drama. As Adam Mckay's 2004 film Anchorman proved, what goes on behind the scenes at news networks is way more interesting when it's presented as comedy. Like, who can forget the following exchange between Ron Burgundy (played by Will Ferrell) and Veronica Corningstone (Christina Applegate): Ron: I don't know how to put this but I'm kind of a big… More

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