Thursday, August 2, 2007

R Kelly to be tried for child pornography


CHICAGO (Reuters) - Grammy Award-winning R&B singer R Kelly will go on trial September 17 on child pornography charges, five years after the accusations were first made, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Kelly, 40, whose real name is Robert Kelly, faces up to 15 years in jail if convicted of videotaping himself having sex with an underage girl. Prosecutors have said the girl could have been as young as 13, but defense attorneys have disputed her age and whether Kelly is on the tape. The underground videotape was widely circulated.

Kelly pleaded not guilty to the charges and in the interim has released hit songs, gone on tours, and released a DVD set of "hip-hopera" skits.

Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan said jury selection would begin September 17.

The trial was delayed, in part, by arguments over when the video was made. It was also pushed back because the judge fell and broke bones and needed to recuperate.

Book on crown princess to be published in Japan

TOKYO (AFP) - A Japanese translation of a controversial book on the country's Crown Princess Masako is to hit the stores here, months after it was shelved amid government protests, the publisher said Thursday.

The book's original publisher Kodansha had planned to bring out a Japanese translation in February, but backed out after the government said it contained some groundless claims.

Now another Tokyo publishing firm, Daisan-Shokan, has said it will publish Australian journalist Ben Hills' book in Japanese in early September.

"We consider the book worth publishing," Daisan-Shokan president Akira Kitagawa told AFP.

"We use the same translation which had been initially given to Kodansha with some corrections made to historical and objective errors," he said.

"Princess Masako: Prisoner of the Chrysanthemum Throne" blames overbearing palace minders for plunging Masako, a former career diplomat, into depression.

Tokyo sought an apology and "corrections" from Hills and the original publisher, Random House, over the book.

Kodansha, Japan's top publishing house, dropped the translation, citing Hills' refusal to apologise for errors.

Hills has accused Kodansha of succumbing to government pressure by dropping the Japanese edition.

Kitagawa said, "I don't think Kodansha's excuse for dropping the book was rational."

Masako, a former diplomat educated at Harvard and Oxford, left a promising career to marry into the world's oldest monarchy in 1993.

She has made few public appearances since 2003 as she suffers from what the palace calls "adjustment disorder."

In one of the most controversial assertions, Hills wrote that Masako conceived her daughter Aiko, who was born after nine years of marriage, through in-vitro fertilisation.

Mainstream Japanese media rarely write disrespectfully about the imperial family, which is widely revered, although Japanese gossip magazines have increasingly broken the taboo.

RECORD LABEL SCRAPS JENNIFER HUDSON'S ALBUM


August 02, 2007. Looks like Jennifer Hudson may be having trouble getting her album together. MediaTakeOut.com has learned that execs over at J Records are not happy with what the Oscar winning singer recorded thusfar. In fact, according to one of our sources at the label, music execs were so disappointed with her recordings, that they scrapped every single song that she made for the album.

Tells one of MediaTakeOut's insiders, "The album was terrible - it sounded like a bunch of Broadway showtunes. If we let that out [to the public], it would have been a disaster." The insider continued, "It's not over for [Jennifer] though. We'll be putting her in the studio with some accomplished producers and hopefully things will turn out better."