Friday, October 16, 2015

Courtesy of Landmark Entertainment Group


Plans are to combine entertainment, social interaction, education and shopping.
Courtesy of Landmark Entertainment Group

Plans are to combine entertainment, social interaction, education and shopping.
Landmark Entertainment Group -- the L.A.-based producer of such attractions as Jurassic Park: The Ride -- intends to launch what it calls a “Virtual World’s Fair,” for use with virtual reality head sets.

The concept is to create a daily virtual reality experience, combining entertainment, social interaction, education and shopping. It will launch the first element, a "Pavillion of Me" concept, in 2016 followed by the full "World's Fair" in 2017, both aimed at the upcoming releases of multiple brands of VR headsets such as Oculus Rift.

Planned segments of the experience include Dataland, targeting children; and Passportal, which will take the viewer to international destinations.

Said Landmark president and CEO Tony Christopher of the vision: "We used our expertise in the theme park and live entertainment space to create a virtual destination for all ages. This is a place where you’ll spend from moments to hours each time you visit, and return to repeatedly, either solo or with your friends and family in tow, just as you would a real-world theme park.”

Last spring, Landmark Entertainment announced its intent to enter the virtual reality business, as well as open mixed reality entertainment destinations that it calls L.I.V.E. (Landmark Interactive Virtual Experience) Centres.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Mr. Burns a post-electric play


Maura Hanlon gives an extraordinary performance as part of a stellar cast in Cape Rep Theatre's production of
With “Mr. Burns a post-electric play,” Cape Rep Theatre has produced a vastly entertaining and intellectually challenging piece of contemporary theater, fully using the refined talents of a highly capable company. The genre – post-apocalyptic speculative fiction – is heavily represented in movies and television, but rarely attempted on stage.

The play begins shortly after the end of civilization as we know it. A haggard group of refugees is trying to distract themselves from worry about loved ones lost, and the fear of what might be happening at nuclear power plants, by attempting to retell an episode of “The Simpsons.” While it’s difficult to reconstruct the episode of the long-running animated TV series, the retelling is helping them survive and is in itself fun for us to watch.

In its second scene, “Mr. Burns” jumps forward seven years, at which time these same characters (plus one) have developed their personal distraction about “The Simpsons” into an example of a burgeoning industry: entertainments based on the performance of nostalgia. Their specialty is cartoons and commercials. At the end of the segment, they rehearse for us an astonishingly well-acted and -sung production number, combining a myriad of styles from hip hop to sitcom, with some Gilbert and Sullivan and Peter Pan thrown in for good measure.

After intermission, the play jumps 75 years forward, to a future in which the small-time nostalgia entertainment show has become a full-blown musical entertainment. It’s part opera, part morality play, combining all the influences mentioned in the first two scenes, starting with a kind of Dies Irae (God's wrath) chant of nuclear-plant workers, then a morality opera focusing on good versus evil (Love versus Hate) with “Simpsons” character Mr. Burns as the Devil and Bart Simpson as the hero, on a voyage down the anthological river of the world.

The writing is eclectic to say the least, so what must hold this play together is the performances. Here the Cape Rep show shines, as each and every member of the cast is able to handle the mercurial changes of style demanded, from realism to cartoon kitsch to musical moments reminiscent of “Les Miserables.” In terms of the cast, Laura Baranik, Greg Cote, Elissa Levitt, Cary Scott, Alison Weller and Jo Brisbane all do superb jobs with the transformation of their multiple characters. But special mention has to go to Art Devine and Maura Hanlon for their extraordinary performances in this show. You have to see them to believe it.

This fine work is supported by an innovative series of settings designed by James P. Byrne, and mild to wild costumes by Holly Erin McCarthy. The direction by Philip Hayes is sure-handed, and uses the talents of the cast to the full. The choreography of Meredith Langton and musical direction of Jacob Yates help make “Mr. Burns” delightful, if enigmatic.

“Mr. Burns, a post-electric play” is fresh, new, disturbing, funny, and a fine example of what theater is up to in this part of the 21st century. Enjoy the ride into “a,” if not “the,” future.

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Rain Amicably Ends Contract With Cube Entertainment


Rain and Cube Entertainment to End Contract
"From a new place, with a new heart, please begin a new future," was the encouraging statement the chairman made regarding the decision. After spending a long time worrying and mulling over the decision, Rain will be taking time to himself to think about his future.

Chairman Hong Seung Sung was one of the key people responsible for cultivating Rain's success after his debut, when Hong was part of JYP Entertainment as a representative. Hong is the founder and largest stakeholder of Cube Entertainment, and Rain regarded him as a "father figure." After Rain completed his military service in September 2013, he joined Cube Entertainment for two years with an exclusive contract without a deposit due to his relationship with Hong.

Now, the focus is on Rain, whose next move is being closely watched amidst rumors and speculation. Given Rain's presence and value in Hollywood and the Chinese entertainment market, it seems that there will be a fierce bidding war between agencies to sign him.

However, Rain has mentioned that he is not ready to make a decision for what comes next. He can find another agency that will support him and his future endeavors, or he could be a free agent. Alternatively, he could sign with a newer agency to fulfill his dreams.

Rain's latest Chinese drama "Diamond Lover" has allowed him to grow his fanbase, thus proving that his options for future projects are plentiful.

Friday, August 28, 2015

Comprehensive entertainment source

New technology offers comprehensive entertainment source with no monthly bill
VStream TV technology offers thousands of movies, TV shows and sporting events.

According to USA Today, U.S. cable, satellite and pay-TV had their worst quarter, from April 2015 to June 2015, losing more than 600,000 subscribers. This falls in line with Fortune's analysis earlier this year that "it may be time for cable to start worrying about online streaming." According to both articles, the culprit for the continual loss in subscribers? Internet and streaming options. Meanwhile, today, VStream TV, a new technology, says it has a solution to eliminating monthly cable and satellite bills forever.

Company representatives say the VStream TV technology is based on the Android system, which allows a multitude of apps, (applications), that allow you to browse the internet, Skype, play the latest 3D games and stream thousands of movies, TV shows as well as sporting events.

"I actually had someone who is a die hard New York Yankees fan wanting access to black out games. With VStream TV, we were able to give him these additional games that his cable service could not," says VStream TV representative, Lee Dickey.

Earlier this year, Fortune reported HBO beginning talks with Apple to consider streaming services.

As other internet-delivered video options look at ways to capture the former cable and satellite subscribers, VStream TV representatives say its technology already answers today's consumers' demands by eliminating monthly cable and satellite bills while offering thousands of movies, TV shows, sporting events, web access and a multitude of other apps that give today's consumers a comprehensive media entertainment technology in one source.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Business Insider is hiring an entertainment editor

Game Of Thrones

Did you read every word of the 50 Cent bankruptcy petition? Are you obsessed with all things "Game of Thrones"? Do you know everything about the biggest films at the box office?

This might be the job for you.

We're looking for someone who:

Has excellent writing and editing skills

Can manage a team of reporters and interns

Has a general knowledge of the entertainment industry

The ideal candidate is someone who would be excited to put up a photo gallery of a star-studded awards show, and use their reporting chops to attack powerful stories that will take our entertainment coverage to the next level all in one day.

If this sounds like the job for you, APPLY HERE with your resume and cover letter.


Business Insider offers competitive compensation packages complete with benefits. This is a full-time position based in our NYC office.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

The Entertainment Weekly Annual Comic-Con Party

Once upon a time, Comic-Con was a niche event for fanboys and fangirls only. Cue 2015, when the multi-day powwow is an A-list draw with plenty of juicy movie news to boot. So if the starlets were sharply dressed for the annual Entertainment Weekly Comic-Con part at the Hard Rock San Diego hotel this weekend, they were certainly there to impress. See: Lea Micheleas the lady in red, with this unforgettable fiery red silk gazar jacket and matching shorts from Zuhair Murad Spring 2015 collection.

Michele wasn't the only refreshing vision, there was plenty of variety on the red carpet from Emma Roberts skinny column toSarah Paulson's tea-length number. In fact, Paulson was checking out the San Diego skyline, while snapping photos with Once Upon a Time's Lana Parrilla. Meanwhile, Community’s Yvette Nicole Brown caught up with pal Aisha Tyler in the hot dog line, whileSharknado star Ian Ziering was in an animated conversation with Harry Potter himself, Daniel Radcliffe, by a roaring fire pit.

Even Jennifer Lawrence, looking gorgeous in a body-hugging white knit dress, came to put her feet up after a busy weekend, chatting with friends in a cabana until 1:30 a.m. While a glance around the room proved that the once casual convention had turned into a fashion forward affair – Katie Cassidy rocked a black and gold number by Balmain, Ashley Madekwe sparkled in Saint Laurent, and Maisie Williams rocked a custom made Alexander Lewis—Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D’s Adrienne Palicki noted you can never be too overdressed for the Con. “You can do anything and nobody will notice, because there's somebody with horns next to you,” laughed the actress, who wore a sparkling Alice + Olivia dress to the fete. “It's fun!”
See all the top looks below! (And we included Sam Heughan from Outlander too just for the eye candy.)


Ashley Madekwe glimmered in Saint Laurent gold.


North AmericaSarah Paulson wore an edgy tea-length number.


North AmericaLily James went for a longer hemline.


Emma Roberts chose an Old Hollywood sinuous dress.


North AmericaBella Heathcote chose a dual-colored party frock.


North AmericaMaisie Williams's slim dress by Alexander Lewis flaunted cut-outs on the back and sides.


North AmericaJaimie Alexander worked separates. She's wearing a Elisabetta Franchini skirt, Rebecca Minkoff jacket, A.L.C. top and Saint Laurent heels.



North America And Sam Heughan was...red carpet eye candy.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

To fight Isis in Last Blood


PRINTA A ARambo's unquenchable thirst to shoot things whilst wearing a headband has previously taken him to Vietnam, Thailand, Afghanistan and Burma, but in Last Blood he is reportedly set to head to Syria, where he will face his toughest enemies yet: Isis.
UPDATE: A rep for Stallone has denied the rumour, which it seems stemmed from a fake new site. "Sylvester Stallone did not attend Comic-Con 2015, and consequently there was no official remark from him regarding Rambo made there at the event," they said. "This is not an accurate report."
If nothing else, the rumour might have stirred the project back into action, which was been gestating for some time.
"We have teams scouting Iraq and parts of Syria where Isis have their greatest strongholds," Stallone reportedly announced at Comic-Con. "We're working with the locals there to help deliver the most intense and realistic Rambo movie experience ever."
If it's realism he's going for, I guess this means Rambo will get caught in a lengthy war of attrition with the militant group (or a fictionalised version of them), or else Stallone is going gonzo and will mount an assault on these 'strongholds' himself with the cameras rolling.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Beautiful women be funny is true?


Tina Fey poses with her Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series for
Commentary
“In the history of the motion-picture business, the number of beautiful, really beautiful women — a Lucille Ball — that are funny, is impossible to find,” former Disney CEO Michael Eisner said in a conversation about mindfulness, of all things, with Goldie Hawn at the Aspen Ideas Festival. “The hardest artist to find is a beautiful, funny woman. By far.” Then he added: “Boy, am I going to get in trouble.”
Eisner is not really in trouble. He’s merely the catalyst for the latest round of a tired, long-running discussion about women and comedy.
“Are women funny?” is one of those questions with an obvious answer that, nevertheless, works reliably as click-bait and talk show fodder.
Are funny women beautiful? Are beautiful women funny? Is there traffic on the 405? Are you spending too much time on your phone? Do America’s gun laws need reforming? Is Hollywood going to reboot that superhero franchise again? Is there a pill for that? Is racism still a thing? Should you call your mother more often? Is Christopher Hitchens dead? Do we still need feminism?
I’d prefer we dedicate our conversations, both digital and analog, to far thornier questions. Should I spend $12 on that smoothie? Is this sexism or does that man just hate me personally? What’s the deal with gluten? How do we solve entrenched income inequality? Do open relationships work? Are humans alone in the universe? How relevant are the opinions of that dead white guy? How relevant are the opinions of that still-breathing white guy?
Alas, we are not discussing any of these pressing issues today. We are, once again, being forced to address whether women can be both desirable and humorous.
The perpetual recycling of this nonquestion has its roots not in genuine confusion — which can be interesting — but in entitled bloviating. And such entitlement is, by this point, dreadfully boring.
“It is an impressively arrogant move to conclude that just because you don’t like something, it is empirically not good,” wrote Tina Fey in her autobiography, “Bossypants.” “I don’t like Chinese food, but I don’t write articles trying to prove it doesn’t exist.”
If there’s any truth to what Eisner said, it’s on the level of truism: Most people are neither really beautiful nor really funny; almost no one is universally regarded as both. Humor, like beauty, is subjective.
Is the world full of really beautiful, really funny women? I happen to think so. But I am not bound by casting norms. I don’t think a woman needs to meet Hollywood’s exacting physical standards in order to tell a sidesplitting joke or even to carry a feature-length comedy. Given the box-office performance of movies such as “Pitch Perfect 2” and “Spy” this summer, I am not alone.
In essence, Eisner wasn’t saying beautiful, funny women don’t exist. He was admitting that he, along with many of his peers in Hollywood, have a problem finding funny women sufficiently beautiful and beautiful women sufficiently funny.
Seen in this light, his comment was less a sweeping statement on the status of women in comedy than it was a cry for help. He should be dealing with this on a couch in his therapist’s office, not on a stage in Aspen with Goldie Hawn.
Even Christopher Hitchens, whose 2007 Vanity Fair essay, “Why Aren’t Women Funny,” is a must-read for cultural critics seeking a lesson in disguising their personal shortcomings as trenchant commentary, admitted that his analysis was personal.
“The achievement of my essay (was) to make sexier women try harder to amuse me,” he said later. “Well, that was my whole plan to start with.” Turn your head if you feel yourself starting to vomit.
Humor is power, as columnist Meghan Daum noted on the occasion of Hitchens’ death in 2011. Usually the extent to which men find women funny is correlated with the extent to which they’re comfortable with women wielding power that goes beyond their physical beauty or sexual appeal.
It’s not surprising that Eisner cited Lucille Ball as an exception to his rule that funny and beautiful rarely coexist. “No, I’m not in favor of women’s liberation,” Ball told the Free-Lance Star in 1970, at the height of the feminist second wave. “I don’t have anything I want to be liberated from.”
Some women are able to meet Hollywood’s exacting beauty standards. Many are not. Both groups, I can assure Eisner and his colleagues, are capable of hilarity. The hardest thing to find is actually a Hollywood power broker who realizes physical perfection is not a prerequisite for telling a good joke.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Restaurant Entertainment

The fantasy gaming industry continues to innovate, bringing with it fresh ideas that provide more types of games in a variety of contexts. That is certainly the case with the announcement of Latitude 360‘s (OTCMKTS: LATX) foray into the space, promising to roll out the first chain of live in-venue “fantasy sports books.” Its dining and entertainment venues are currently located in Indianapolis, Jacksonville and Pittsburgh, with plans to open another location in Albany, Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis and a 100,000 square-foot location in the heart of Wall Street.
Latitude 360 will not venture into the competitive fantasy sports space alone. It has also revealed an acquisition of Major League Fantasy (MLF), a growing destination for online daily fantasy sports that is partnered with the Golden State Warriors. According to MLF CEO Jesse Merl, MLF has seen its user base triple over the past 2 months.
“We’re thrilled to become a part of the Latitude 360 family,” added Merl. ”We can’t imagine a better way to grow our audience than to make it accessible through the most exciting entertainment destination to come along in a very, very long time. The Latitude 360 venues ensure that after proper game implementation, our competitors will be fighting for second place in the live real-money fantasy vertical we are creating.”
A Latitude 360 venue in Indianapolis.
A Latitude 360 venue in Indianapolis.
The plan starts with including iPads in Latitude 360′s sports theater that offer patrons the ease of interacting through fantasy-style gaming. It extends to the creation of VIP rooms for high rollers with contest entries projected to range from $250 to $25,000 along with a viewing experience for players and spectators that will cause many to flock to Latitude 360 venues. The concept is centered around enticing fantasy-crazed people to come to Latitude 360 locations for sporting events, because it will be the optimal entertainment venue to participate in fantasy sports.
“Our HD Sports Theaters are the perfect venue to prove that people want to play fantasy this way and ‘360 Fantasy LIVE’ will be available by NFL kickoff,” said Latitude 360 CEO Brent Brown. ”The Latitude 360 brand has never been second best in any category we entered willingly. We are confident that this will be a shining reflection of this continuing trend.”
Latitude 360 is unique because it is essentially a company that owns dining and entertainment venues that is entering the fantasy sports space as opposed to a technological start-up seeking to build a platform from scratch. It quickly fills a need of having a fantasy-related platform through the acquisition of MLF. Incorporating that platform into its existing and future locations, Latitude 360 has the opportunity to focus on capturing a share of a fervent fantasy sports market that few, if any, have attempted to attack.
Sports-related shareholders of Latitude 360 include Cliff Avril of the Seattle Seahawks, Rashad Jennings of the New York Giants, Derek Wolfe of the Denver Broncos, Chris Ivory, Tyson Alualu and other current and former National Football League players. The company also recently signed a partnership with wide receiver Julio Jones of the Atlanta Falcons.

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

The rise and rise of the SFW manicure

This year at the Oscars, E! Entertainment’s Mani Cam – a weird red carpet feature that zoomed in on celebrity’s manicures as their hands “walked” down a miniature red carpet – was deemed so irritating that it was finally dispensed with. Perhaps it was a sign.
At the autumn/winter shows, not one agenda-setting designer – from Celine to Loewe to Prada – featured brightly-coloured nail varnish on the catwalk. Leandra Medine, of the influential Man Repeller blog, hardly ever wears visible varnish, either: “On the off chance I would colour my nails,” she says, “I realised that, because I am such a fan of accessorising with rings and bracelets, the nail polish felt too everything: accessorised, done-up, meditated.”
Leandra Medine's natural-toned nails.
Leandra Medine’s natural-toned nails. Photograph: Man Repeller/Instagram
“I haven’t worn nail varnish since Christmas,” adds Whistles CEO Jane Shepherdson. “I’m actually not very good at it, but it does feel slightly ‘not me’ when I do. It always looks slightly too glamorous, and a bit like I’m dressing up and trying to be someone else.” Joseph creative director Louise Trotter agrees: “I have flirted with nail varnish on a few occasions, but ultimately, as with makeup, less is more, especially as a woman gets older. Some women look great with colour but for me, a good [sheer] manicure with very short nails is so much more appealing and practical.”
Still, Spring is here, sandals are soon to be an option and toes must eventually emerge from their fluffy cocoons. To smarten them up without using colour, try the easy, understated and entirely SFW (suitable for work) mani-pedi. In short, this means eschewing nail art and elongated talons for clean, bare – or buffed-looking – nails.
Manicures backstage at the Simone Rocha show, with Essie’s iridescent white shade Waltz.
Manicures backstage at the Simone Rocha show, with Essie’s iridescent white shade Waltz. Photograph: Essie
First, hit the testers to find your shade, as the eventual colour of barely-there nail varnishes will vary hugely depending on your skin and nail tone. “There are so many to choose from,” says Chanel manicurist Jenni Draper. “Just when you think you have seen every shade of beige, there is another one.” Next month, for example, Chanel releases another four, ranging from Lovely Beige – the colour of builder’s tea – to Precious Beige, a high-shine peach.
From left to right: Chanel’s Le Vernis Beige Pur; Essie’s Sugar Daddy; Chanel’s Le Vernis Lovely Beige; Essie’s Fed Up; Chanel’s Precious Beige.
From left to right: Chanel’s Le Vernis Beige Pur; Essie’s Sugar Daddy; Chanel’s Le Vernis Lovely Beige; Essie’s Fed Up; Chanel’s Precious Beige.
Medine, meanwhile, is a fan of Essie’s Spaghetti Strap and Adore-a-Ball; Trotter mixes sheer layers of different colours to avoid anything that feels too white or yellow – often Essie’s Fed Up underneath its Sugar Daddy. To get perfect results at home, says Draper, the key is good base coat. “That acts as a ridge-filler and covers any imperfections,” she says. “The better the canvas is, the smoother the polish will go on. Apply it in two or three thin coats. Always apply a glossy top coat.” Chips will be less noticeable than with bright nail paint – as will any mistakes – so once painted, you shouldn’t need to think about it again for a couple of weeks. Simple.
A model with a barely-there manicure walks at the Celine show.
A model with a barely-there manicure walks at the Celine show. Photograph: Rex

Monday, March 9, 2015

Far From The Madding Crowd: still seductive and shocking

Julie Christie in Far From The Madding Crowd
I bid you good luck, young Thomas Vinterberg, if you think your forthcoming remake of Far From The Madding Crowd will outstrip John Schlesinger’s version from 1967, now extensively reupholstered and rereleased for our delectation.
Schlesinger’s Hardy was derided back then for its casting of Julie Christie and Terence Stamp, mere months after they’d been name-checked in the Kinks’ Waterloo Sunset, and who then seemed more Swinging London than Wailing Wessex. Time and distance have eradicated that feeling, however, and I delighted in the credits as they unfolded: not just Terry and Julie, but Peter Finch and eternal peasant-pagan Alan Bates, all perfectly cast; Stamp in particular, as the vile Sergeant Troy, whose name should really be “destroy”.
But behind the camera too, there is joy to be had. Frederic Raphael’s screenplay, tied to Hardy as it must be, keeps the screenwriter’s more irritating locutions and “sparkling dialogue” tendencies in check, and serves Hardy admirably in terms of scale and pacing, while making hay of double entendres such as Troy’s leering “I’ll unfasten you in no time”. But perhaps the heart of the movie is the relationship between production designer Richard Macdonald – the man responsible for Joseph Losey’s eye-popping “mise-insane” films during the 60s – and cinematographer Nicolas Roeg, at the height of what I think of as his Red Period as a cameraman. Best of all is to see a large-scale British period movie in which millions and millions of MGM’s dollars are clearly and effectively visible on the screen.
Having grown up largely in parts of the real Wessex myself, this has always seemed the Hardy adaptation that really captured the scale, beauty and menace of the landscape, and all its colours and moods. Schlesinger and his team keep their palette rural early on, with greens, browns and earth tones predominating, until the arrival of Troy, which unleashes a cancer of red upon this hitherto painterly colour scheme, convulsing and finally destroying all those who come in contact with it and with him. In one particularly sulphurous moment, Troy is seen riding in a blood-coloured cart that looks as if it’s arrived straight from Roeg’s 1964 project The Masque Of The Red Death. Cut straight to Bathsheba at home, stitching scarlet cloth for curtains; now she’s infected, too.
Elsewhere are the usually vigorous Finch as the dried-up, semi-impotent suitor Boldwood and Bates’s decent sheep farmer Gabriel Oak. This is also the movie where Christie really found herself as an actor. Then there is the story itself, of Bathsheba and the tragedies she unwittingly sets in train. Hardy remains a shocking writer (Dead babies! Suicide! He sold his WIFE??!! ). His people are fallen, his world is broken, his scale is Mahler-ish in its hysteria and violence; in all these areas, Schlesinger, Macdonald and Roeg served him immensely well.

Monday, February 9, 2015

How About Wedding Party Favors?

Chances are, there will be a debate on which one is best and which one is not. If you are among those people who are completely lost on what wedding party favors to give to your loved ones and friends, the following quick tips will definitely help you solve your dilemma. Before you can even decide on what kind of favors you will handout to your guests, you need to decide the right theme for your wedding party.

Always keep in mind that wedding favors are not the things that should cost you a fortune. They are not mandatory, in the first place, so why spend too much? They will serve as thank you gifts for the guests, as well as a remembrance of the party. It is a nice gesture to give tokens of appreciation to your guests, a way to show that you appreciate their time and presence just to be with you in the most happiest day of your life. Party guests deserve your thanks and appreciation, and you can do it by giving great party favors.
Today, couples can easily find and purchase almost everything they need by just a few clicks. You can find a wide array of selection for wedding favors, invitations, decorations and other essential wedding supplies and accessories on thousands of online stores. Not only that, if your budget is a bit limited, shopping for a wedding party favor online is a practical idea to go about.

The bridal party dance is a dance where people who were in your wedding dance together and with you. So, your bridesmaids, groomsmen, ushers, and flower girl and ring bearer will be dancing with you. A great and fun song might just be "Thank you for Being a Friend", which is to an extent sentimental, but can also be fun and good feeling as well. Many couples choose to do something even more fun, like "Party Tonight" or other types of fun, party songs.

Even if you are using a DJ, you'll want to sit down with him or her and make a list of the tunes that you'll be playing and enjoying during your dance. Be sure to include a list of titles that you'd rather not have him play during the dance. If you chose a beach theme, you can give favors related to the beach like seashells, stones, or even beach sand. If the party happens during the winter and you have a winter theme then you could give snowflake gel candles, snowflake bottle stopper, or snowflake place card holder.