Archive for September 18th, 2002

Auctions Askew Returns!

September 18th @ 7:45 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Ming

  • Ming’s back from the honeymoon, thus our brief stint running all the other View Askew sites (in addition to this one, of course) is over — Ming’s got an exciting job, for sure, always something going on with one of the family of .com’s these days! Anyway, with Ming back, things are back on track, with 5 new items up for grabs, including more great, rare View Askew threads, another of those multi-signed posters, and more. The auctions have been running a few days, but you still have time to get a bid down on something — Good luck!

Jersey Girl Films In Berlin (Diner, That Is…)

September 18th @ 7:44 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Robert Getz, Chasman

  • Affleck, Lopez, and Tyler wowed fans with their generosity as they waved, chatted, and signed for a huge crowd outside the Berlin diner in the small New Jersey town. The Courier Post Online had this wonderful story:

Hollywood comes to Berlin

Surely there have been bigger events in the history of Berlin.

It’s just that no one can remember when.

For hundreds who lined the White Horse Pike at Broad Street just about all day Monday, this was it. A once-in-a- lifetime moment fueled by megawatt Hollywood star power.

“This town lives for stuff like this,” said Ronnie Kapischke, 47, manager of a Wawa whose parking lot was the front line of a celebrity safari for Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez and Liv Tyler, stars of Jersey Girl. The film, by Central Jersey native Kevin Smith, is being shot in South Jersey and Philadelphia.

Kapischke said crowds started gathering around 5 a.m. By 11, they’d bought her last roll of film.

The Berlin Diner – a metal-plated, art deco, neon- lighted throwback across Broad Street – was the location for a scene being filmed Monday.

“Ben … J. Lo … Liv,” voices barked out from the crowd, which grew to about 400 by midday, as the onlookers’ idols breezed on and off the set.

Affleck, an Oscar winner and certified matinee idol, worked the fans into a frenzy just before 10 a.m., strolling across Broad Street to meet and greet.

Women cooed as the chiseled, 6-foot-3 actor turned up the charm. He posed, offered kisses, signed autographs and smiled for just about everyone and everything in front of him as the crowd pressed in.

Affleck even grabbed several cell phones to chat with unbelieving friends who would have killed to be there.

“He talked to my girlfriend,” sighed Tina Caro, 40, of Berlin, still breathless a few hours later.

Caro, a school bus driver, said her friend Marcy Czechowski was resting at home in Cherry Hill after recent surgery.

“He told her to have a good recovery,” Caro said. “He called her `sweetie.’”

No doubt about it, this was a big deal for Berlin, whose population is slightly above 6,000.

“It’s such a treat to have a movie set in a town people used to make fun of,” said Lori Singley, 49. “When we were growing up, people used to call us farmers. This is a nice little Jersey town.”

Jersey Girl is actually set in the Monmouth County borough of Highlands. It’s about Affleck, a New York City PR man forced to move back to his hometown with his wife, played by Lopez, and their daughter, the title character. Scenes also have been shot in Paulsboro.

But that’s all Hollywood stuff. As far as the locals here were concerned, Jersey Girl reflects them and their community.

“It’s great for Berlin,” said Police Chief Lawrence Winters, who deployed 13 of his 16 officers to the scene.

The only thing that rivaled the excitement, Winters said, occurred several years ago when the old Berlin Hotel was moved down the pike to a new location.

Kapischke remembered the hotel spectacle, but ranked Monday’s movie shoot higher.

“The hotel was old and ugly,” she said. “Ben is not old or ugly.”

The crowds, packed on both sides of the pike behind yellow police tape and under an overcast sky, spied every move. Technicians, extras, stand-ins and just about everyone near the action were fair game for adulation. Lopez stoked the fans by sweeping into the diner just before 11 a.m. and leaving shortly afterward, wrapped in Affleck’s arm.

Tyler, daughter of Aerosmith singer Steve Tyler, also drew whoops and hollers as she was whisked in and out of the restaurant.

But the crowd, overwhelmingly female and swelled by kids off from school for Yom Kippur, left no doubt about its favorite.

“We’ve been out here since 7 a.m.,” said borough resident Stephanie Amato, 15, as pal Jessica Malespin, 13, stood next to her. “We were across the street and we thought they weren’t going to let us come over here to get an autograph from Ben Affleck, but we squeezed through the crowd.”

Their reward: autographed T-shirts they swore would never be washed again.

Check it out online as well.

More photos the on-location (Berlin Diner) shoot come to us courtesy of the Inquirer, which you can see above:

HUNDREDS OF starry-eyed movie fans crowded around the Berlin Diner, in Berlin, Camden County, yesterday, to catch a glimpse of actors Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez and Liv Tyler who were filming the movie, “Jersey Girl.”

The crowd erupted when Lopez stepped out of a SUV and waved to fans.

Tyler and Affleck delighted the crowd when they emerged from filming in the diner.

There was also a correction regarding the item on Affleck and the baby that they ran recently:

“In Sunday’s item about Ben Affleck’s going goo-goo over babies on the set of ‘Jersey Girl’, I listed his year of birth as 1962. It’s 1972. Also, the names of baby Shane Kubiak’s mother and aunt were transposed; his mother is Fran Savastano, and his aunt is Theresa Marsden.”

Jersey Girl NewsBites™

September 18th @ 7:43 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Starlite, Lauren, Robert Getz, Chasman

  • A local New York Fox Morning show on channel 5 ran a quick clip with Ben & J-Lo filming JG yesterday. The announcer did give the movie a mention by name.
  • Quotes from Kevin regarding Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez filming Jersey Girl made the IMDB’s People News section (taken directly from the recent “Week Two” entry of the Jersey Girl diary).

View Askew NewsBites™

September 18th @ 7:43 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Cheryl Hodge, Dawn, Eric Bylenok, Gary, Keith Moore, Starlite

  • The Ben Affleck-produced “Push, Nevada” premiered on ABC last night. The drama will give viewers a chance to win a huge chunk ‘o cash (the first clue revealed the amount to be OVER a million bucks):
Ben Affleck, Oscar-winning co-writer of Good Will Hunting, and Sean Bailey, his executive-producing partner on the breakout hit Project Greenlight, take another bold step in the re-invention of modern entertainment with the provocative and offbeat mystery series Push, Nevada.

Mild-mannered IRS agent Jim Prufrock (Derek Cecil) travels to a remote desert town in search of missing money and stumbles on a place where mystery, danger and peculiar characters lurk around every off-kilter corner. Everyone has a secret in Push, Nevada, but no one is talking, unless they’re telling Jim to get out of town — fast. Every word, every sign, every gesture could hold a clue to solving the riddle of this tiny Nevada town. Solving the clue to the missing fortune could win you $1 million.

The mystery begins when a fax from the Versailles Casino in Push is sent by accident (perhaps) to Jim, alerting him to a sizable accounting error — and an embezzlement scheme involving a fortune in cash. Casino honcho Silas Bodnick refuses to talk about the missing money, so Jim’s investigation leads him to Push, where nothing is as it seems.

Push is a town where neighborhood couples indulge in synchronized romance each night at 9:15; where the only casino, the Versailles, pays out the biggest jackpots in the state; and where the lonely look for companionship at “Sloman’s,” a slow-dance bar. It’s there that Jim meets Mary (Scarlett Chorvat), a beautiful and enigmatic woman who tells him that the mystery of Push is, “like all the best secrets, not quick in the telling,” and warns him to go home before he gets hurt. A determined man, Jim plans to find out what mystery lies behind Push, no matter what the risk. All along the way, a shadowy team of high-tech operatives monitors his every encounter with the town’s denizens.

The pilot episode, co-written and Executive Produced by Matt Damon will air a sneak preview on ABC Television, Tuesday, September 17th at 9/8pm central. The series premiere is on Thursday, September 19th at 8/7c. More information can be obtained at the official Push, Nevada website: http://abc.abcnews.go.com/primetime/push/index.html

So, all we wanna know is, as members of the View Askew family, can we compete? Huh, huh? Can we? Chances are we’ll fall under some strange subsidiary of ABC or something with the Miramax connection — Ben, say it ain’t so!

  • Affleck was ALSO the first guest on the primetime Regis & Kelly show last night. He was interviewed live via satellite from Philly, yet NO mention of Jersey Girl! He did treat folks to his Regis impression, chat about his 30th birthday, and get some plugs in for Push, Nevada & Daredevil.
  • According to CD-Wow, there are region 0 version of the Clerks and Chasing Amy coming out on DVD (in PAL format) in the UK. Those of you in other regions who don’t have copies of these on DVD yet might want to take note, as the region-free ability should allow these to play on any PAL-compatible DVD player.
  • Jason Lee showed up on The Daily Show and talked Stealing Harvard, but Askew-related items were mentioned quite a bit. Skateboard talk was still there, but Jason did make the comment that he “sleeps with the director”. Kevin, Chasing Amy, and even Jersey Girl were mentioned. Stewart pointed out that he gets asked back by directors over & over, citing Kev & Cameron Crowe, to which Jason replied “Kevin is making a new movie with Affleck & J-Lo. I’m in it for one day and I’m the Veteran!”. Dark Horizons ran a behind the scenes clip of Lee’s upcoming “Dreamcatcher” yesterday as well.