[NOTD] News Of The Day - 29/06/2007

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Posted: 18 years ago
#1

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Dr. Who jokes about Harry Potter Book 7

Jeff writes in to tell us:

I just wanted to let you know that the second episode of Doctor Who's 3rd season, titled "The Shakespeare Code", has a couple of clever Harry Potter references.

The episode aired on CBC this past Monday here in Canada, but we're almost 3 weeks ahead of the States, so "The Shakespeare Code" should air Friday, July 13 on SciFi.

In one scene, after the Doctor's companion Martha Jones comments that recent goings-on are all "a little Harry Potter," the Doctor says, "Wait till you read Book Seven. Ohhh, I cried."

There's also another fun Harry Potter reference right near the end.

Edited by ~*Thamizhan*~ - 18 years ago

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Posted: 18 years ago
#2

Harry Potter and the Sinister Spoilers

You might think the most important product that the publisher Scholastic will release this summer is Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and last book in J.K. Rowling's nearly infinitely bestselling fantasy series. But you would be wrong. Deathly Hallows, which goes on sale at the stroke of midnight on July 21, is merely a by-product, the catalyst for something else. The real product is something that Scholastic executives call, in hushed, reverential tones, "the magic moment."

This is the moment of ineffable, intangible ecstasy that occurs when a reader opens his or her brand-new $34.99 copy of Deathly Hallows for the first time. "All the way through the process, everybody who touches this [manuscript] has the same goal in mind," says Arthur A. Levine, Rowling's editor. "Midnight. Kids." The magic moment is a rare and delicate thing: it occurs only when the reader comes to the book in a state of pure ignorance, with no advance knowledge of its contents. For the magic moment to happen, the theory goes, the reader's mind must be preserved in a state of absolute innocence—it must be, in Internet parlance, spoiler-free. So to preserve the magic moment against informational contamination—via the Web or watercooler conversation or the Rita Skeeters of the global media—Scholastic has created an infrastructure around Deathly Hallows unlike anything the publishing world has ever seen.

On Tuesday, July 3, if they stick to their custom, roughly a dozen people will gather in a conference room on the sixth floor of Scholastic's headquarters in Manhattan, as they have done nearly every Tuesday this year. They are members of the Harry Potter brain trust, the people in charge of every aspect of the seventh coming of Harry Potter in the U.S. The group includes, among others, Levine; Lisa Holton, president of Scholastic's trade division; Scholastic's art director and its heads of sales, marketing, production, communications and manufacturing; and the company's general counsel. "This room is really the most paranoid room," says Holton. "We don't talk to our children and spouses for months." The seriousness with which the members of the Harry Potter brain trust regard their collective mission cannot be overstated. "We have always known that the series is already a modern classic," Holton says. "If you think about it in terms of literature, I can't think of another series—not just in children's literature but in adult—that does what J.K. Rowling does. Even Dickens doesn't come close."

The job of the Harry Potter brain trust begins when Rowling's creative process ends. In the case of Deathly Hallows, that happened on Jan. 11, 2007, when Rowling (whose name, let it be said for now and all time, rhymes with bowling and not howling) wrote the very last word of the Harry Potter saga in a suite at the Balmoral hotel in Edinburgh. The task of traveling to England to pick up the manuscript fell to Mark Seidenfeld, the attorney who handles all things Harry for Scholastic. To make absolutely sure the manuscript was safe on the plane, he sat on it.

But he didn't read it. Even this close to the book's release, very few people at Scholastic have had any actual contact with the contents of Deathly Hallows—"a handful," according to Kyle Good, Scholastic's head of communications. Among that handful was Levine, who gets to edit the world's most famous writer. ("She's very strong, but she's not blind," he says. "She seems really to value when we ask her questions. She'll say, 'Oh, I knew what that was in my mind, but if it's not coming across that way, why don't we say X.'") Another early reader was a studious 28-year-old named Cheryl Klein, whose job title is continuity editor. Rowling's books have become so complex—and their fans so obsessively nitpicky—that it takes a full-time Potterologist to make sure Rowling's fictional universe stays factually consistent. "I keep track of all of the various proper nouns that appear in the series," says Klein. "For instance, with Bertie Bott's Every Flavor Beans, I make sure it's always B-o-t-t-apostrophe-s. Every Flavor is not hyphenated, and Flavor does not have a u." It's a tough beat: Klein acknowledges, for example, that in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Moaning Myrtle sits in a U-bend toilet, whereas in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, she occupies an S-bend toilet (this crept in, it should be noted, before Klein's tenure, which began after Goblet). Klein has either the worst job in the world or the best, depending on how you look at it.

Like everyone else at Scholastic, Klein maintains the Harry Potter omert. "Most people know better than to ask," she says. "That includes my friends and my family and everyone else." After Rowling revised the manuscript, per Levine's and Klein's suggestions, Klein flew to England to pick up the new draft. On her way home she was stopped for a random security check at Heathrow. "The woman opens up my bag, and she starts pawing through it. And she says, 'Wow! You have a lot of paper here.' And I thought, Oh, God, she's going to look at it, and she's going to see the names Harry and Ron and Hermione. But I just smiled, and I said, 'Yes, a lot of paper!' And she said, 'Uh-huh,' and she zipped it up. That was the end of the scariest two minutes of my life."

At first the number of copies of the Deathly Hallows manuscript was kept to an absolute minimum. One went to the book's designer. Also admitted to the inner circle was Mary GrandPr, the Florida-based artist who illustrates the U.S. editions. (If you've seen the English cover for Deathly Hallows, you know how lucky Americans are to have GrandPr.) "She is a wonderful lady," Good says. "She had an image of what Harry Potter looked like, but when she went to actually draw his face, she was really having a lot of trouble. She had the messy hair, the glasses, but what did his jawline look like? She walked over, and she looked in the mirror, and she sketched her own face."

While GrandPr studied her jawline in the mirror and searched for inspiration, the heavy industrial gears of the Harry Potter engine were beginning to grind up north. The more copies of a book a publisher prints, the more security issues multiply, and Deathly Hallows has the largest first printing of any book in history. By July 21, Scholastic will have shipped 12 million copies for the U.S. market alone. The threat to the magic moment is quite real. In 2003 a forklift driver at a British printing plant was caught hawking pages from Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. A month before Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince went on sale, two men were arrested in England for trying to sell a copy to a reporter; one of them is currently doing 4 1/2 years. As a result, Scholastic won't give out the locations of the printing plants it uses or even how many there are. (As for Bloomsbury, the series' British publisher, it fiercely denies a rumor that it forces factory workers to print Deathly Hallows in pitch darkness.) The finished books travel to stores on pallets, sealed in black plastic, in trucks tracked by GPS.

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Posted: 18 years ago
#3

Radcliffe gets $50m for two 'Potters'?

Daniel Radcliffe is being paid $50 million for the final two Harry Potter films, according to a report.

The Daily Mail says the star will be paid $25 million for both Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince and The Deathly Hallows - although this will be reduced by tax, commission and agents' and managers' fees.

The large figure is said to be down to his importance to the series and the fact that being type cast as Potter could harm his later career.

Radcliffe, although he did not confirm the amount, said proceeds from the Potter films meant he could pursue other, less profitable, projects without concern.

"Obviously, I'm in a very fortunate position where I don't have to do things for the money," he explained. "I can simply do them because there's an interesting character and a good director involved.

"The money is absolutely fantastic and I'm very grateful, but it's not the main thing that drives me. Being on Fortune [magazine] lists is all very nice, but I am my own person. What people write about me doesn't make me who I am."

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Posted: 18 years ago
#4

Harry Potter Goes Cruising with P&O

Head's up, muggles -- don't cancel your July cruise because you'll be missing the newest Harry Potter book release; P&O Cruises is planning on getting it for you!

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows will be released on land at midnight on Saturday, July 21, which coincides with two of P&O's July 20th sailings: Aurora's 16-night "Venetian Magic" and Oriana's 14-night "The Dolce Vita Cruise." Both ships will be departing from Southampton with copies of the book onboard before it sets sail. Potter fans can snag these books at the ship's libraries at midnight -- just as if they were on land -- for approximately $28.87 (14.39 pounds).

On July 20, the first day of both sailings, the ship's daily newsletter will reflect the Harry Potter theme with a new name: "Daily Prophet." Midnight, though, is when the Potter Palooza really kicks in: Both ships' "moonlit launch" events will feature Hogwarts characters like Dumbledore, Hagrid and Harry along with all-familiar book-inspired candy: cauldron cakes, liquorice wands, sugar quills, chocolate frogs, peppermint toads, jelly slugs, fudge flies and butterbeer.

And although Cruise Critic always urges to pack light, this is one exception; kids, don't forget your best Harry Potter gear (we know you have a wizard hat and cloak stashed away somewhere!), because there will be a costume contest. The prize for the best Harry, Hermoine, Ron or other favorite character? A "Petrified Potters musical statue."

But what about adults, P&O ... can we dress up too? We here at Cruise Critic are huge Harry Potter fans!

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