White Collar – Vested Interest

  • Title: White Collar – Vested Interest
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White Collar

While giving a talk at a FBI convention with a disgruntled Neal (Matt Bomer), Peter (Tim DeKay) learns a thief (Jason Pendergraft) has conned his way into the convention to steal an important piece of defense technology right under the nose of 500 FBI agents. Returning to the convention with Neal, Jones (Sharif Atkins) and Diana (Marsha Thomason), the group tries to find the impostor before he can finish his job.

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Keira Knightley disappears into the fantasy for Vogue

To help promote her latest film, Anna Karenina, actress Keira Knightley sat down for an interview and cover phootshoot for October issue of Vogue. In the interview Knightley discusses playing the complex role of Anna Karenina, the style and costumes of the film, her latest project Can a Song Save Your Life?, her preference for the dialogue of period films, her upcoming marriage to Klaxons‘ keyboardist James Righton, her struggle to define her style, and planning her first Christmas as a married couple. You’ll find pics of the shoot inspired by the film and behind-the-scenes video inside.

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Perception – Light

  • Title: Perception – Light
  • tv.com: link

perception-light

In the First Season finale Kate (Rachael Leigh Cook) uncovers evidence that leads her to believe Professor Pierce’s (Eric McCormack) delusion of a conspiracy may have some truth. Meanwhile Pierce, after admitting himself for psychic evaluation, finds himself forced to deal with the truth about Natalie (Kelly Rowan) when his new doctor looks exactly like his most loyal hallucinatory friend.

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It Girl and the Atomics #2

it-girl-and-the-atomics-2-coverI really enjoyed the first issue of It Girl and the Atomics from Madman creator Mike Allred because it was off-beat without getting as weird as Allred’s other work. Issue #2 ventures a little further into that territory, and although I didn’t enjoy it as much as last month’s comic, it’s still worth a read.

After agreeing to test out Dr. Flem‘s Electrical Transference machine, It Girl finds herself outside her body in a different reality (not dissimilar to a STNG Holodeck) without her powers, shifting between corporal and incorporeal, battling the Skunk and the other members of his gang.

I’m unsure whether this was a look into the future, past, or an alternate dimension (and slightly miffed the comic feels equally unsure), but It Girl’s adventure keeps the humor and tone I really enjoyed in last month’s first issue.

I’ve also got to praise the variant cover by Darwyn Cooke which certainly helps sell issue #2. Worth a look.

[Image, $2.99]

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