Archive for November, 2009

Hot New Harajuku Laptop Sleeves by Gwen Stefani

Rocker mom Gwen Stefani is all about the tech accessories! Just a couple of months ago she showed off her fashionable L.A.M.B laptop sleeves in N.Y.C. And now she’s introduced a Japanese-inspired Harajuku Lovers collection which includes laptop sleeves and bags for your beloved gadgets.

This 13-inch Kanji Girls print Harajuku Lovers sleeve ($35) is made from poly twill fabric and includes an enamel heart logo zipper pull in black and white. And don’t worry, with its water resistant fabric, and quarter-inch protective foam filler, your laptop will always stay protected from the elements.

From Geek Sugar

Bon Jovi, Gwen Stefani Take (Taylor) Swift Action

Jon Bon Jovi and Gwen Stefani are following in Taylor Swift’s sports-bar-crushing footsteps — because the two pop stars are also suing a hometown drinking establishment for allegedly jacking their music.

According to a lawsuit filed in Minnesota last month, several of Gwen and Bon Jovi’s compositions were publicly performed at Sally’s Salloon & Eatery — and they claim the bar never got the licensing it needed. Now Bon Jovi, Gwen, and all the other people who own copyrights to their music want the bar to pay damages … and stop playing their songs.

This could be a crushing blow to the local watering hole — because as we all know, a bar without Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer” is like a bird without wings.

Calls to Universal Music Group weren’t returned. A rep at Sally’s wasn’t even aware of the lawsuit.

From TMZ

2009 Event Photos Updated

I have completed the photos of Gwen from all the public events that she’s attending this year – more than 250 photos!

You can view all the photos by clicking on the thumbnails below…


Gwen Stefani Lightens Up With Sunshine Cuties

Gwen Stefani’s Harajuku Lovers have touched off a flurry of activity at Coty, creating five new juices, new outfits, optimistic tans and pedicured toes.

The newest incarnations — dubbed Sunshine Cuties — are limited edition summer scents, which will hit stores in February.

“We wanted to change up the outfits, because that’s what they are — little fashion plates,” said Stefani during a recent interview. “We did that first with the Snow Bunnies [an earlier flanker project], and then we started thinking, ‘Let’s change up the fragrances.’ So we did, and we based the scents on their personalities and a sort of summer fun feeling.”

Stefani was excited to get back into the fragrance labs. “I find [the fragrance development process] difficult but a lot of fun,” she said. And she had a built-in testing group: “I was on tour earlier this year, so I had a whole group of wives and girlfriends to try the fragrances out on,” she said, noting she also developed her spring apparel line while on tour. “There’s not one that I wouldn’t wear. And what’s fun about having five is you have five chances that people will like at least one of them!”

(more…)

No Doubt sues Activision over use in Band Hero game

No Doubt sues Activision over use in Band Hero game
The rock group says the Santa Monica video game maker went far beyond agreed-upon uses of members’ likenesses in Band Hero, including manipulating them to perform songs popularized by other acts.

Rock band No Doubt has filed a real-world lawsuit over its virtual role in the just-released Band Hero edition of the Guitar Hero video game series, contending that the game has “transformed No Doubt band members into a virtual karaoke circus act,” singing dozens of songs the group neither wrote, popularized nor approved for use in the game.

In a suit filed Wednesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, the band alleges that Santa Monica-based Activision Publishing Inc., the maker of the game, far exceeded the contractually approved use of likenesses, or avatars, of band members Gwen Stefani, Tony Kanal, Tom Dumont and Adrian Young.

An Activision spokesman said the company had not seen the complaint and therefore had no comment.

“The band [members] are bitterly disappointed that their name and likeness was taken and used without their permission,” band manager Jim Guerinot said.

“They agreed to play three No Doubt songs as a band. . . . Activision then went and put them in 62 other songs and broke the band up [and] never even asked.”

The suit also charges that the game allows users to manipulate No Doubt characters to sing songs popularized by other pop music acts. No Doubt’s contract with Activision allowed the company to use the band’s music and likenesses in no more than three of the band’s own songs, the suit says. The game, which was released Tuesday, puts the group members’ images, collectively and individually, into more than 60 songs, “many of which include lyrics, contained in iconic songs, which are not appropriate for No Doubt and have not been and would not have been chosen by No Doubt for recordings or public performances.”

Specifically, the suit notes that through the game’s Character Manipulation Feature, Stefani’s image can be induced to sing the Rolling Stones’ “Honky Tonk Women.”

“While No Doubt are avid fans of the Rolling Stones and even have performed in concerts with the Rolling Stones,” the complaint says, “the Character Manipulation Feature results in an unauthorized performance by the Gwen Stefani avatar in a male voice boasting about having sex with prostitutes.”

The suit says Activision executives withheld disclosure of the character-manipulation feature and refused the band’s request to remove or disable it in conjunction with the No Doubt avatars after the band learned how they were being used. The complaint says Activision officials told the band that doing so would be “too expensive.”

The suit asks for unspecified actual and punitive damages, a temporary restraining order, a preliminary injunction and a permanent injunction against distribution of the game and for Activision to recall existing copies.

In September, after Nirvana leader Kurt Cobain’s likeness was used in Guitar Hero 5, his widow, Courtney Love, and former bandmates Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic complained that the game placed him in front of other bands singing their hits. In that instance, Activision said the company had received written permission from Love to use Cobain’s likeness as a fully playable character. She subsequently Twittered that she had “never signed [off] on the avatar.”

From the LA Times