Publicist


 

A publicist is a person whose job is to generate and manage publicity for a public figure, especially a celebrity, or for a work such as a book or movie. Publicists usually work at large companies handling multiple clients. See more at Publicity.

Related Topics:
Job - Publicity - Celebrity - Book - Movie - Client

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The Top US Entertainment Publicists are:

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Lizze Grubman, Grubman PR

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Karen Ammond, KBC Media Relations

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PMK Public Relations, 1775 Broadway, Suite 701, New York, NY 10019

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Latest news on publicist

Twin girls for Lisa Marie Presley

Singer Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of rock icon Elvis, has given birth to twin girls, her publicist reveals.

Ignoring its own reporting, NY Times did not point out falsehoods in Corsi's smear books on Obama, Kerry

In an October 7 article on author Jerome Corsi's detention in Kenya that day, New York Times reporter Jeffrey Gettleman wrote that Corsi's recent book smearing Sen. Barack Obama, The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality, "raises pointed questions about Mr. Obama's history of drug use, his 'extensive connections' to Islam and his relationships with Kenyan politicians, among other things -- allegations that Mr. Obama's campaign and others have widely disputed." However, the Times did not point out that The Obama Nation in fact contains numerous proven falsehoods -- not simply "widely disputed" allegations -- as Media Matters for America has documented and as the Times itself has noted. The factual problems with Corsi's smear book are most recently evidenced by the author's publication in a September 7 "WorldNetDaily Exclusive" of 11 "corrections to the next printing of The Obama Nation." In an August 12 article by Jim Rutenberg and Julie Bosman, the Times itself pointed out that "[s]everal of the book's accusations, in fact, are unsubstantiated, misleading or inaccurate." The article continued: For instance, Mr. Corsi writes that Mr. Obama had "yet to answer" whether he "stopped using marijuana and cocaine completely in college, or whether his drug usage extended to his law school days or beyond." "How about in the U.S. Senate?" Mr. Corsi asks. But Mr. Obama, who admitted to occasional marijuana and cocaine use in his high school and early college years, wrote in his memoir that he had "stopped getting high" when he moved to New York in the early 1980s. And in 2003 The State Journal-Register of Springfield, Ill., quoted him responding to a question of his drug use by saying, "I haven't done anything since I was 20 years old." Indeed, one of Corsi's corrections addresses the "pointed question[] about Mr. Obama's history of drug use" that Gettleman reported and that Rutenberg and Bosman previously discredited: 6. Page 77 now reads: "Still Obama has yet to answer questions whether he ever dealt drugs, or if he stopped using marijuana and cocaine completely in college, or whether his drug use extended into his law school days or beyond." It will be corrected to read: "Obama told several reporters that he stopped taking drugs sometime during his college years." Additionally, Gettleman wrote that "Mr. Corsi's attacks on Mr. Obama are similar to what Mr. Corsi did in 2004 when he co-authored a sharp-edged book about [Sen.] John Kerry ("Unfit for Command") that helped derail Senator Kerry's presidential bid." But Gettleman did not note that Corsi's earlier smear book, Unfit for Command: Swift Boat Veterans Speak Out Against John Kerry, contains false and baseless attacks on Kerry's military service. Indeed, Rutenberg and Bosman noted in their August 12 article that Unfit for Command "included various accusations that were ultimately undermined by news reports pointing out the contradictions." Additionally, Susannah Meadows, who covered the Kerry campaign for Newsweek and reviewed the book for the Times, found that Unfit for Command "is totally unconvincing." She wrote in an October 10, 2004, review: The problem is that John O'Neill, who is the driving force and public face of the book, is so curdled with hatred for Kerry that, as though he were an unreliable narrator in a Nabokov novel, you can't trust what he says. [...] While O'Neill's anger is real, his claims appear to be faulty. He wrongly asserts, for example, that Kerry branded him (and every other Vietnam veteran) a war criminal. From Gettleman's October 7 New York Times article, "Kenya Detains U.S. Author Critical of Obama": On Tuesday morning, Jerome R. Corsi was all set to bash Senator Barack Obama on his ancestral soil. Mr. Corsi, a right-wing author who specializes in attack books, came to Kenya to publicize his newest work, "The Obama Nation," which raises pointed questions about Mr. Obama's history of drug use, his "extensive connections" to Islam and his relationships with Kenyan politicians, among other things -- allegations that Mr. Obama's campaign and others have widely disputed. [...] Mr. Corsi was looking forward to presenting evidence of close ties between Mr. Obama and [Kenyan Prime Minister Raila] Odinga, Mr. Corsi's aides said, and some suggested that this may have been what led Mr. Corsi to the door. Kenya's minister of immigration, for one, is a political ally of Mr. Odinga. "I'm not going to name names," said Mr. [Peter] Mbae, the publicist [for Corsi in Kenya]. "But let's just say that a certain section of the government didn't want this press conference." Mr. Corsi was also planning on visiting a relative of Mr. Obama who lives in a slum and giving him money, Mr. Mbae said. Mr. Corsi's attacks on Mr. Obama are similar to what Mr. Corsi did in 2004 when he co-authored a sharp-edged book about John Kerry ("Unfit for Command") that helped derail Senator Kerry's presidential bid. By 8 p.m., Mr. Corsi was at the airport, waiting for a flight out of Kenya, Mr. Mbae said. From Rutenberg and Bosman's August 12 article, "Book Attacking Obama Hopes to Repeat '04 Anti-Kerry Feat": Almost exactly four years after that campaign began, Mr. Corsi has released a new attack book painting Senator Barack Obama, the Democrats' presumed presidential nominee, as a stealth radical liberal who has tried to cover up "extensive connections to Islam" -- Mr. Obama is Christian -- and questioning whether his admitted experimentation with drugs in high school and college ever ceased. Significant parts of the book, whose subtitle is "Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality," have already been challenged as misleading or false in the days since its debut on Aug. 1. Nonetheless, it is to make its first appearance on The New York Times best-seller list for nonfiction hardcovers this Sunday -- at No. 1. [...] In its timing, authorship and style of reporting, the book is strikingly reminiscent of the one Mr. Corsi wrote with John O'Neill about Mr. Kerry, "Unfit for Command," which included various accusations that were ultimately undermined by news reports pointing out the contradictions. (Some critics of Mr. Kerry quoted in the book had earlier praised his bravery in incidents they were now asserting he had fabricated; one had earned a medal for bravery in a gun battle he accused Mr. Kerry of concocting.) [...] Several of the book's accusations, in fact, are unsubstantiated, misleading or inaccurate. For instance, Mr. Corsi writes that Mr. Obama had "yet to answer" whether he "stopped using marijuana and cocaine completely in college, or whether his drug usage extended to his law school days or beyond." "How about in the U.S. Senate?" Mr. Corsi asks. But Mr. Obama, who admitted to occasional marijuana and cocaine use in his high school and early college years, wrote in his memoir that he had "stopped getting high" when he moved to New York in the early 1980s. And in 2003 The State Journal-Register of Springfield, Ill., quoted him responding to a question of his drug use by saying, "I haven't done anything since I was 20 years old." In an interview, Mr. Corsi said "self-reporting, by people who have used drugs, as to when they stopped is inherently unreliable." From the October 10, 2004, book review by Meadows, " 'Unfit for Command': Hostile Fire": If John Kerry loses the presidential election, ''Unfit for Command,'' by John E. O'Neill and Jerome R. Corsi, will go down as a chief reason. The book -- a sort of companion piece to the political attack ads placed by O'Neill's group, Swift Boat Veterans for Truth -- is a furious assault on Kerry's character and service in Vietnam. Navy records have discredited the book's claim that Kerry lied to get his Bronze Star and third Purple Heart -- though only after the sensation hijacked cable news for a month. But for all the impact it's had on the race, the book itself is totally unconvincing. The problem is that John O'Neill, who is the driving force and public face of the book, is so curdled with hatred for Kerry that, as though he were an unreliable narrator in a Nabokov novel, you can't trust what he says. (His co-author, Jerome Corsi, an old friend of O'Neill's, has referred to Kerry on a conservative Web site as ''Commie Kerry.'') O'Neill, himself a Swift boat commander in Vietnam, resents Kerry for testifying before Congress in 1971 against the war. It's an understandable beef, one shared by many veterans, and it's clearly the root of the whole Swift boat controversy. While O'Neill's anger is real, his claims appear to be faulty. He wrongly asserts, for example, that Kerry branded him (and every other Vietnam veteran) a war criminal. In fact, Kerry took pains not to make such a sweeping charge: in his testimony he cited an investigation during which 150 veterans described atrocities they themselves had witnessed or had committed. Though this part of Kerry's statement is quoted in the book, the distinction is lost on O'Neill and his co-author, who bring up the war crimes issue over 50 times. [...] But O'Neill and Corsi refuse to back down, even in the face of logic or history.

Surgery on Jade Goody 'went well'

An eight-hour operation in which British reality TV star Jade Goody had a hysterectomy "went well", her publicist says.

Reno 'did not have heart attack'

French actor Jean Reno's publicist denies reports that the star had a heart attack whilst on holiday in the Caribbean.

Second son born to singer Stefani

Singer Gwen Stefani has given birth to her second child, a boy named Zuma Nesta Rock, her publicist announces.

Taylor recuperates after illness

Dame Elizabeth Taylor is recovering at home after a spell of several weeks in hospital, her publicist says.

Dave Matthews Band founder dies

Saxophonist LeRoi Moore, a founding member of the Dave Matthews Band, dies, his publicist confirms.

Corsi's reported cancellation of scheduled appearance on "pro-White" radio show leaves unanswered questions

As Media Matters for America and the Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch blog have noted, Obama Nation author Jerome Corsi was reportedly scheduled to appear on the August 17 edition of The Political Cesspool Radio Show, a program whose "Statement of Principles" asserts that it "represent[s] a philosophy that is pro-White." Corsi had appeared on the July 20 edition of the show, in which he promoted his then-forthcoming book The Obama Nation and criticized Sen. Barack Obama. However, according to a post on Political Cesspool host James Edwards' blog, "Corsi, who had confirmed his appearance on today's Political Cesspool broadcast even after the recent media firestorm erupted, had his publicist send us an email canceling his appearance, which we received only a few minutes before his segment was scheduled to start. This is the only information we received, in the subject line: we need to cancel for tonight travel plans have changed." Corsi's reported statement that he cancelled the August 17 appearance because of a change in "travel plans" raises the following questions: Edwards claimed that Corsi "confirmed his appearance on today's Political Cesspool broadcast even after the recent media firestorm erupted." Given that Corsi has sought to distance himself from what Media Matters for America Senior Fellow Paul Waldman recently described as a "series of bigoted and hateful posts" Corsi wrote during 2001 to 2004 on FreeRepublic.com's online forums, why was Corsi reportedly planning to appear -- for at least the second time -- on a "pro-White" radio show? If Corsi simply cancelled the reportedly scheduled August 17 appearance because of a change in travel plans, does he intend to reschedule and appear on the "pro-White" program at a later date? If Corsi did not actually cancel his reportedly scheduled appearance because of a change in travel plans, but rather because of increasing media scrutiny of the show, is he willing to publicly condemn it? As Media Matters has documented, according to its "Statement of Principles," Political Cesspool "represent[s] a philosophy that is pro-White" and "heartily endorse[s] and accept[s] as our own, the founding tenets of the Council of Conservative Citizens [CCC]." According to a Fall 2007 article in the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Report, " 'The Political Cesspool' in the past two years has become the primary radio nexus of hate in America." Media Matters has documented numerous statements by Edwards on his blog that echo Political Cesspool's statement of principles, as well as his statement that "[i]nterracial sex is white genocide." Media Matters has noted that Corsi's July 20 appearance was streamed "Live" on the self-described "White Nationalist" and "White Pride" website Stormfront.org. Edwards has stated on his blog that Political Cesspool is "in syndication" with Stormfront, which The Washington Post described as "a central meeting place for the white power movement" in a June 22 article about "an increase in racist and white supremacist activity" surrounding Obama. Prior to Corsi's appearance on the July 20 broadcast, Edwards claimed that "most Jews ... regard[] Jews and whites as two different races," and co-host Winston Smith repeatedly referred to Obama as a "mulatto." The August 17 edition of Political Cesspool was also streamed live on Stormfront. From Stormfront.org, accessed at 5:30 p.m. ET on August 17:

DeGeneres and De Rossi wed in LA

US talk show host Ellen Degeneres marries her long-time partner, actress Portia de Rossi, her publicist confirms.