BlackBerry shares surge on huge order for new devices



TORONTO (Reuters) - BlackBerry shares surged on Wednesday after the smartphone maker said one of its established partners has placed an order for 1 million BlackBerry 10 smartphones, with shipments starting immediately.

The Waterloo, Ontario-based company said this order marks the largest ever single purchase order in BlackBerry's history, indicating strong demand for its Z10 smartphones powered by its new BlackBerry 10 operating system.

The company's Nasdaq-listed shares jumped 8 percent to $15.62 in afternoon trading, while its Toronto-listed stock rose 8.3 percent to C$16.06.

(Reporting by Euan Rocha; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

Actor Ed Asner treated in hospital for exhaustion



NEW YORK (Reuters) - Veteran actor Ed Asner was rushed to a hospital on Tuesday night while performing in a one-man show in Gary, Indiana and was being treated for exhaustion, his publicist said on Wednesday.

Asner, 83, "had to be taken off stage due to exhaustion and is resting comfortably at a Chicago-area hospital," Charles Sherman told Reuters.

The actor, best known for his role as Lou Grant in "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and a later dramatic series "Lou Grant," both of which won him Emmy awards, "is expected to be released later today," Sherman said.

Asner was performing a one-man show, "FDR," in which he plays President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Earlier in the evening he had conducted an acting class in Gary, but appeared disoriented when the performance began. Medical personnel were called.

Sherman said Asner, who has served as president of the Screen Actors Guild, had been slated to perform "F.D.R." in other cities later this week, and he did not know whether those performances would be canceled or rescheduled.

Last week another "Mary Tyler Moore" veteran, Valerie Harper, revealed she is suffering from incurable brain cancer, and may have only months to live.

(Editing by Chris Michaud)

Amazon cuts price of largest Kindle Fire tablet



By Alistair Barr

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc said on Wednesday it cut the price of its largest Kindle Fire tablet, part of an effort by the world's biggest Internet retailer to get the device into the hands of as many consumers as possible.

The Kindle Fire HD 8.9 inch Wi-Fi tablet will now be priced at $269 in the United States, down from $299. The 4G wireless version now starts at $399, compared with $499 before, Amazon said.

Amazon is launching its larger tablet in the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Japan. Dave Limp, president of Amazon's Kindle business, said the company has increased production of the devices in conjunction with the overseas launch. The cost of making the tablets has fallen with greater economies of scale, letting Amazon cut prices, he said.

"Whenever we are able to create cost efficiencies like this, we want to pass the savings along to our customers," Limp said in a statement.

(Reporting By Alistair Barr; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Leslie Adler)

Rodman backs black papal candidate in PR stunt



ROME (AP) After raising eyebrows by going to North Korea, former U.S. basketball star Dennis Rodman is continuing his bizarre global tour by visiting Rome purportedly to help Ghanaian Cardinal Peter Turkson become the first black pope.

But Rodman didn't seem too sure who he was supposed to be promoting when asked about it Wednesday. "From Africa right?" Rodman asked, wearing a hat and T-shirt promoting the Irish betting firm that organized his trip.

Rodman said he was sure the next pope would be black and that he would like to meet him in Africa on his self-styled mission to promote world peace.

Even Rodman's plans to enter St. Peter's Square in a custom-built "pope-mobile" were uncertain Wednesday: The vehicle had been delayed by snow in northern Italy.

Mel Brooks on 'Blazing Saddles' musical, 'Pizza Man' slasher film



By Brent Lang

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Mel Brooks doesn't sound like a man in his twilight years.

The comic genius who ushered in a whole new level of cinematic crudity with such classics as "Young Frankenstein" and "The Producers" may be 86 years old, but he isn't interested in retiring.

When he's not busy picking up honors, such as the American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award, which he will accept this June, he's toying with turning another one of his films into a Broadway play, as he has done to multiple Tonys and big box office in the past. He may even try his hand at directing a slasher film, for a dramatic change of pace.

Brooks spoke with TheWrap recently about his fondness for Subway, his gastrointestinal habits (he did after all set the high water mark for fart jokes with "Blazing Saddles") and his experiences mining his catalog of talk show appearances and comedy routines for a special box set.

Titled "Mel Brooks: An Irresistible Collection of Unhinged Comedy," the newly released five-disc collection includes interviews with Brooks and rare archival footage. It was culled together by Shout! Factory, which has built a reputation as something of a one-stop shop for fans of the funny, by providing comprehensive collections of material by iconic comics like Steve Martin and classic shows like SCTV.

It may be more than four decades since "The Producers" had audiences humming along to "Springtime for Hitler," but Brooks still has the ability to land a punchline.

How are you feeling?

I vacillate between diarrhea and constipation, but I'm living a good life. I've got 20/20 vision and my hearing is pretty good. I go to my desk every day, and I wear a sweater like Bob Cratchit at work, even though it's L.A.

What's your secret?

I have a good appetite. I go to Subway every day for a turkey sub with the fixings, you know olives and lettuce, and maybe a piece of ham (but don't print that last part). I get chips, but only the Baked Lays.

I still read. I've always got a book. I'm reading "Dead Souls" by Gogol. I strongly recommend it.

After the success of "The Producers" and "Young Frankenstein" would you consider turning another one of your movies into a musical?

Well "Blazing Saddles" is almost there. I get the feeling that if I could find the time to write three or four more songs, it could be a bold and crazy musical.

Are you working on any new movies?

I'm working on a horror film; it's kind of a traditional slasher film called "Pizza Man." It reminds me of those Hammer Films from the 1950s. So who knows - I might direct it, but I need to polish it and rewrite it.

I've got Cary Elwes playing the lead and Stacy Keach is interested in being the villain.

I've got to get the distribution though. I would be happy to go raise the money, but I won't do that without distribution. That's the mistake many of these people make, because they raise the money and then they can't get a decent DVD deal because they don't have distribution in place.

How did you first become involved with Shout! Factory? It was years ago. I didn't know who the hell they were, and the Foos brothers and Bob Emmer came to me and said we would like to do "The 2000 Year Old Man" as a collection. They were Rhino Records at the time. And they did it with this beautiful book and pictures. They later sold that company to Warner Brothers, but they bought one thing back and that was "2,000 Year Old Man." I was really touched by it, but I hope they don't have buyers remorse, because it must have cost them a fortune.

Are you planning to do another box set with them?

I'd be very interested in doing one on Brooksfilms, which was the production company I set up. We made movies like "The Elephant Man," "My Favorite Year" and "The Fly," a lot of near-masterpieces. They're movies that people don't know I'm connected with. I'd love to issue the films with a lot of commentary and interviews and really look at the serious aspect of my career. I feel like I've neglected it, and I think my kids and grandkids would be proud to find out I was connected with these movies.

What do you think distinguishes Shout! Factory from other companies you've worked with?

They are so disciplined when it comes to getting stuff done and making sure they do their due diligence. They're not just going to fling something to the winds like a lot of companies do. They take great care in deciding what to make. They never abandon it. They watch their child grow.

The layout of the box set, the way the DVDs are put into their particular sleeves, it's kind of a gem. It's a visual treasure really.

I'm very conscious of what it means to have a company behind you. When Alan Ladd Jr. ran Fox, I was always automatically greenlit, and I think Shout! Factory is a lot like the Camelot days at Fox when if I have an idea, l don't even think of going anywhere else with it.

Christian Slater joins ABC's Kyle Killen drama pilot



By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Christian Slater is breaking into a new gig.

"Breaking In" star Slater has joined the cast of ABC's drama pilot "Influence."

The pilot, written by "Awake" creator Kyle Killen, centers on a complicated relationship between two brothers who run an agency that solves its clients' problems with the science of human motivation and manipulation.

Slater will play Ross, one of the brothers. A brilliant schemer who was recently released from prison after serving time for fraud, Ross is roiling with ideas, given to rationalization, high-wired, charmingly persuasive and, three years after a divorce, an inveterate ladies' man.

Steve Zahn will play Clark, the other brother who runs the agency.

The pilot is being produced by 20th Century Fox Television, with Killen executive producing as well as writing, and Keith Redmon also executive producing.

Slater's most recent series, Fox's "Breaking In," was pulled from the network's schedule last April, after being initially canceled and then resurrected by the network.

Bird brains can crack nut trading game with self-control: study



OSLO (Reuters) - Cockatoos can delay eating nuts in order to win tastier ones, a surprise sign that birds can exercise self-control, a trait usually seen as the preserve of animals with larger brains, a study showed on Wednesday.

Scientists gave Goffin cockatoos, a mainly white species from Indonesia, a nut while showing them a more attractive one just out of reach. If the birds did not nibble the first nut for up to 80 seconds, they learnt they would get the second instead.

"Imagine placing a cookie directly into a toddler's mouth and telling him/her that he/she will only receive a piece of chocolate if the cookie is not nibbled for over a minute," said lead author Alice Auersperg at the University of Vienna.

"Only few, typically large-brained animals have been shown to be able to inhibit the consumption of an immediate food reward in anticipation of a bigger one for more than one minute," the University said in a statement.

The birds were given pecan nuts, and all 14 of those studied waited for up to 80 seconds to win a more attractive cashew nut, according to the findings in the journal Biology Letters.

A video showed one bird, Muppet, waiting 40 seconds while strutting agitatedly around a table top with the first nut in its beak before exchanging it for a second.

(http://youtu.be/c86EYtmllhc)

Self-control in human infants was studied in the 1970s in the Stanford Marshmallow Experiment. Under that test, children were given a marshmallow and told that they would get a second if they did not eat the first for several minutes.

Commenting on that test, the Vienna University statement said. "Interestingly, children who were able to wait for the delayed reward showed greater success in adult life than the ones who ate the first marshmallow right away."

The ability to trade depends on being able to suppress the impulse to eat the first reward. It also requires a judgment on the reliability of the trader and the relative costs of the delayed reward, Vienna University said.

(Reporting by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent; Editing by Louise Ireland)

It's a dog's life in Formula One



(Reuters) - A dog's life in Formula One, if your owner is Lewis Hamilton, means a VIP pass to the races and being pampered by the sport's supremo Bernie Ecclestone.

Hamilton, the 2008 champion who moved from McLaren to Mercedes at the end of last year, has acquired a bulldog called Roscoe which accompanied him to the last pre-season test in Barcelona.

The Briton told reporters before this weekend's Australian season-opener in Melbourne that he had asked Ecclestone for a paddock pass for his "new best buddy" and had sent him a photograph of the puppy wearing a set of headphones.

"He has - and, yes, he will get it. I am a huge fan of bulldogs," Ecclestone, 82, told the official formula1.com website on Wednesday.

"I have told him that I would also be happy giving the dog a pass for the grid. And I will be happy to look after the dog while he is racing."

Animals are usually banned from racetracks, for safety reasons more than for their own welfare, with stray dogs causing problems in the past at some venues such as India.

In the United States, the Target Chip Ganassi IndyCar team have a bull-terrier mascot 'Bullseye' that has made appearances at race weekends including the Indy 500 winner's news conference with Dario Franchitti in 2012.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Alison Wildey)

AP NewsBreak: Dylan voted into elite arts academy



If he lived in England, he'd surely be Sir Bob Dylan.

The most influential songwriter of his time has become the first rock star voted into the elite, century-old American Academy of Arts and Letters, where artists range from Philip Roth to Jasper Johns and categories include music, literature and visual arts. According to executive director Virginia Dajani, officials couldn't decide whether he belonged for his words or for his music, so they settled on making him an honorary member, joining such previous choices as Meryl Streep, Woody Allen and a filmmaker who has made a documentary about Dylan, Martin Scorsese.

"The board of directors considered the diversity of his work and acknowledged his iconic place in the American culture," Dajani said recently. "Bob Dylan is a multi-talented artist whose work so thoroughly crosses several disciplines that it defies categorization."

Dylan's manager, Jeff Rosen, had no immediate comment on Dylan's reaction Dylan did accept membership, a condition for the vote to go through or whether he would attend the academy's April dinner or May induction ceremony. Dylan usually tours in the spring and is already booked for much of April for shows in the East and Midwest, none of them in the New York City area.

"I would guess it's unlikely," Dajani said of whether Dylan would show up for either occasion.

On Tuesday, the academy announced three other honorary choices, all from overseas: Spanish architect Rafael Moneo, South African writer Damon Galgut and Belgian artist Luc Tuymans. Voted into the academy's core membership were the novelist Ward Just, known for his stories set in Washington, D.C.; the influential minimalist artist Richard Tuttle and the acclaimed painter and printmaker Terry Winters.

Excluding honorary picks, the academy consists of 250 artists, musicians and writers. Openings occur upon a member's death, with current inductees nominating and voting in new ones. Members have no real responsibilities beyond agreeing to join, although some become active in the academy, which awards prizes worth as much as $200,000.

Founded in 1898 and based in upper Manhattan, the academy once was designed to keep the likes of Dylan away, shunning everyone from jazz artists to modernist poets. Even now, the vast majority of the musicians come from the classical community, with exceptions including Stephen Sondheim and Ornette Coleman. Dajani and other officials have said that the academy is reluctant to vote in rock performers because they already have organizations, such as the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, to honor them.

The 71-year-old Dylan is already the first rock performer to receive a nomination from the National Book Critics Circle, for his memoir "Chronicles: Volume One"; and the first to receive a Pulitzer Prize, an honorary one in 2008. He's routinely mentioned as a Nobel candidate and for decades has been scrutinized obsessively by academics and popular critics.

Dylan has had fans and even friends in the academy, among them the late poet Allen Ginsberg. A Dylan admirer and 2012 inductee, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Michael Chabon, will give the keynote address at the May ceremony. The title will be "Rock 'n' Roll."

____

Online:

http://www.artsandletters.org/

Sharon Stone sued by another domestic worker



By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Sharon Stone just can't seem to find good (or at least non-litigious) help these days.

"Basic Instinct" actress Stone has been sued by a domestic worker - the second one to file suit against her in as many years.

In a complaint filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Monday, Angelica Castillo claims that she was fired after two-plus years as a housekeeper. Castillo claims that, after she injured her back while performing her duties, Stone refused to let Castillo honor her doctor's orders - going so far as to call her "stupid" and "crazy."

Castillo claims that, in June 2012, she injured her back while unloading groceries, causing her "extreme and severe physical pain."

According to Castillo, on September 28, she was placed on modified duty at work by her doctor, and told to "undertake a brief period of bed rest." However, the lawsuit claims, Castillo was told that she was made to come into work that day. Moreover, she alleges, "Despite physician's orders to avoid lifting heavy objects, Plaintiff was required to perform her regular duties including but not limited to grocery shopping, lifting and moving heavy items as part of cleaning the residence."

A spokesman for Stone has not yet responded to TheWrap's request for comment.

On October 1, Castillo claims, while she was still in "severe pain," Stone "repeatedly yelled at Plaintiff for performing her duties more slowly, and called her 'crazy' and 'stupid.'"

Castillo says she was fired that same day, after Stone and other, unnamed defendants refused to even look at her doctor's report.

Alleging wrongful termination, wrongful retaliation, failure to provide accommodation and failure to engage in good faith interactive process, Castillo is seeking unspecified damages, plus a declaration that Stone has engaged in unlawful employment discrimination, lawsuit costs, interest, and attorney and expert witness fees.

Last May, Stone was sued by a woman claiming to be her former nanny, who said that Stone made disparaging remarks about her ethnicity and religious beliefs, and illegally fired her for receiving rightfully obtained overtime pay.