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‘Slow Learners’ star Adam Pally: ‘Marriage and kids is hard’

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 16 April 2015 | 10.46

Adam Pally and Sarah Burns star in 'Slow Learners," a rom-com debuting Monday at the Tribeca Film Festival.Photo: Chase Bowman

Adam Pally knows his bros. He bro-ed up the medical field on "The Mindy Project" for the past two seasons as Dr. Peter Prentice and, before that, he introduced America to the gay-bro, playing Max Blum on the sitcom "Happy Endings."

So it must have come as a relief that, in the new movie "Slow Learners," he plays a total nerd. With a little digging, Pally found some common ground.

"In my real life, I'm actually quite shy," Pally, 33, admits. "It takes a little bit of time to get to know me, and I kind of put up a bunch of barriers, one of them being a very overtly outgoing persona."

In the romantic comedy, which premieres Monday at the Tribeca Film Festival, with no theatrical release date yet, Pally plays that shy guy: a sad-sack high school guidance counselor who decides to snap out of his lame life and try out a fast-paced summer full of alcohol, sex and trendy clothes.

Pally played Mindy Kaling's bro-tastic colleague Dr. Prentice on "The Mindy Project."Photo: Jordin Althuas/FOX

"I thought of the character as what would have happened if I got into some kind of car accident and all my ambition was gone, and I just was, like, very content," says Pally of his character's original demeanor.

The New Jersey native, who lives in LA with his wife and two kids, doesn't know much about complacency.

He's wrapped up his time on "The Mindy Project" and now has a deal with ABC to write and produce projects. He's also starring in the 2016 comedy "Dirty Grandpa" with Zac Efron and Robert De Niro.

But first, in "Slow Learners," he's pumped to be playing a romantic lead, something he never saw in his future. In fact, as a writer, he didn't see himself acting at all, let alone in a rom-com, a genre of which he's not particularly a fan.

Although, he says, "I like drinking wine with my wife on the couch and watching a movie like that."

Maybe he'll warm up to the genre too, since, after all, he can be a slow learner himself.

"I tend to learn things after I do them. I'm kind of impulsive. Like, I'm learning marriage and kids is hard," he says, laughing.

"[And] I'm still learning my limits," he adds. "I guess I'm always kind of evolving my limits on alcohol and drugs. I'm always like, 'Oh, that's too much. Now I know.'"

For tickets: tribecafilm.com, 866-941-3378. Screening at Bow Tie Chelsea Cinemas (260 W. 23rd St.) and Regal Cinemas Battery Park 11 (102 North End Ave.).


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Parents are paying $150,000 to tour colleges in private jets

Stepping off their private plane at remote Auburn-Lewiston Airport in Maine, the 17-year-old boy and his family climb into the waiting Escalade that whisks them to the elite Bates College in less than five minutes.

The group spends the afternoon touring the renowned liberal arts school before jetting off the next day to Pittsfield, Mass., to visit the prestigious Williams College in nearby Williamstown.

Next up, it's a short flight to Waterville, Maine, ahead of an interview at tony Colby College.

While most high school seniors complete the dreaded college circuit in a rental car or their folks' worn-out station wagon, an increasing number of parents are spending tens of thousands of dollars on private jets to ferry their privileged kids to college campuses.

After all, why endure a five-hour drive from Manhattan to Cornell in the far-flung Finger Lakes when you can land in style at Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport in a Gulfstream G200?

Anthony Tivnan

"It's becoming a bigger part of our business," says Anthony Tivnan, president of leading private-jet charter company Magellan Jets, which organized the 12-leg, $150,000 trans-America tour for the son of a California-based financier and his relatives in August 2014.

"Dozens of families are taking advantage of the convenience by visiting colleges this way."

The service is so popular, last month Magellan launched a special package for "budget-minded" college-goers. The National Bank of Mom and Dad can now buy 10 hours of flight time aboard a Magellan jet for a bargain price of $43,500.

The deal includes varsity wear for the entire family emblazoned with the letters and emblems of each college — Princeton hoodies for everyone! — plus matching notebooks, and pointers from an independent admissions advisor.

Magellan even goes so far as to offer introductions to "high-profile alumni," such as athletes and successful businesspeople, either in person or by phone.

"We take care of everything," explains Tivnan. "Many commercial airlines don't have direct flights into airports near the universities, making it difficult to see multiple colleges in one day.

"Fly privately and you can visit as many as five or six colleges in the space of two or three days."

Meanwhile, Jet Edge, a rival of Magellan Jets, reports that a well-heeled client last year checked off six schools in three days — Emerson College, Boston University, NYU, Columbia University, the University of North Carolina and Tulane University.

"It's less about the decadence, more about the timesaving," insists Jet Edge president Bill Papariella, adding that the tour costs the customer around $80,000.

Of course, the types of families who use these services are card-carrying members of the 1 percent. "We have a lot of private individuals, in real estate, investment banking and hedge funds," says Papariella. "It's not so much Fortune 500 CEOs, who live [under the microscope.]"

Apparently, they don't want to risk the negative publicity of traveling by private jet for "this kind of [family] thing."
That's not the case, how-ever, for Magellan clients. Tivnan reveals that Fortune 500 CEOs are among his best customers. (No clients from either jet service would speak on the record to The Post.)

"Being gone [from the office] for 12 days to visit your kid's preferred colleges?" he asks. "That's not going to happen for these people.

"We can make the whole thing possible over a weekend."

Licensed pilot Patricia Reed, the director of flight support for Magellan Jets, heads the five-strong team that coordinates the campus tours. She arranged 18 such trips in 2014 and is working on a fresh set of itineraries as the college-tour season picks up this spring.

"It's always a very exciting time for families, but also quite stressful," says Reed. "We try to personalize the experience as much as possible and make it extra special."

"Special" includes so-called "ramp service" at the airport (where a Lincoln Town Car will meet the jet on the tarmac and take the group directly to the college) plus fancy onboard catering, whether it's a steak from Smith & Wollensky or summer rolls from Nobu.

The swankier aircraft, such as the Challenger 604, might have a flight attendant, but some families prefer to bring their own staff to serve food. "It depends entirely on the individual," says Reed, adding that, on smaller jets, the first officer might be the one pouring the coffee or Champagne.

As for extravagant requests, Reed's go-to bubblies are Veuve Clicquot and Cristal, while a tray of bonbons might be supplied by top Chicago "chocolate lifestyle house" Vosges Haut-Chocolat.

"We aim to turn the cabin into their living room at home," says Reed, who can also put families in touch with college alumni (often fellow clients of Magellan Jets) and even arrange meet-and-greets with top sports people.

"That way, they can talk over the events of the day in a relaxing environment."

During the trip, the family can go over a booklet of tips provided by leading college advisor Top Tier Admissions, based in Concord, Mass., which partners with Magellan Jets. Afterward, the passengers may submit their observations on each college to the flight support team, who will edit them into an easy-to-read format.

Wednesday Martin

"These are people who are pressed for time and have a laserlike focus on the task at hand," says Top Tier Admissions co-founder Mimi Doe.

"When you get there more easily and seamlessly, you can approach each college with a clear head. Expedited travel makes the whole thing less overwhelming."

This growing trend of touring campuses on private jets comes as no surprise to Manhattan-based author and social anthropologist Dr. Wednesday Martin, whose much-anticipated memoir, "Primates of Park Avenue," will be published in June.

"I know many families who do this on a routine basis," she says. But they don't use charter services like Magellan Jets or Jet Edge — they're the 1 percent of the 1 percent who own their own private planes.

Martin somewhat wearily tells The Post that it's another symptom of what she terms "privileged parenting" among wealthy families, and the "luxe-ification of childhood."

"It's cradle-to-college coddling," she says. "That basic reproductive impulse to shield kids from predators, disease and starvation is now rerouted to protect them from discomfort and inconvenience."

She recalls how one Upper East Side mother she interviewed for her book was concerned about the use of the family's private jet to take her teenager to California and the Midwest for two college interviews.

I know many families who do this on a routine basis. It's cradle-to-college coddling. - Wednesday Martin, Manhattan author, on the trend of touring colleges by private jet

"She was coordinating these tours, but the difficulty was that the family also needed their private plane to go to various contemporary art shows like Art Basel," says Martin. "She had to figure out how to use the jet for all these things because she did not want to fly commercial."

Luckily, the mother's staff got involved to resolve the dilemma.

"She was able to get her child to, let's say Stanford, for his interview, and herself to the art shows to buy the pieces she needed," concludes Martin.

As for Reed, who serves as the point person for parents, personal assistants or "family managers" to arrange campus tours, she says the hardest part of her job is keeping the moms calm.

"Their kids are growing up fast, and these tours are bittersweet," she says. "But the most difficult part is further down the road, when they hire a jet to drop them off at college [for good].

"That's when we stock extra boxes of Kleenex."


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Daytime engagement: ‘Bachelor’ host Chris Harrison on his new ‘Millionaire’ gig

Chris Harrison will segue into daytime TV as the new host of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire."

Harrison, 43 — who's been hosting ABC's "The Bachelor"/"The Bachelorette" et al. since 2001 — will assume his new responsibilities when "Millionaire" kicks off its 14th season this fall.

He's the fourth host of the game show's daytime version.

Harrison talked to The Post about his new role on "Millionaire" — and how he'll balance this new job while continuing to host "The Bachelor."

Is hosting a daytime show something you've thought about before — or did this present itself as an "out-of-the-blue" kind of situation?
My team and I have been discussing entering the daytime space for quite some time. We've discussed many options, including a talk show, but nothing has felt right until now. I've always had a soft spot in my heart for great game shows and, more specifically, game show hosts. "The Bachelor" is my baby; I love this franchise, but as host I'm extremely grateful that I'm allowed to do more.

Are you familiar with the "Millionaire" rules or will you take a crash course in learning how the game is played?
I am very familiar with the 'Millionaire' rules because I'm a fan. It was a huge TV phenomenon when it debuted in prime time [in 1999] and I was a part of that. My style of hosting works best when the game and rules are memorized and rehearsed to the point I don't think twice about them.

Will you be "trained" to host "Millionaire" or learn as you go along?
Any time you jump into a new project and start hosting a new show there's a learning curve. Practice and rehearsal only help so much. Nothing truly gets you up to speed like hosting the real thing. The game and the contestants are the stars. I'm there to drive the show, the stories and the drama. My job is to make it as exciting and thrilling as I possibly can.

How will this work re: balancing the taping of "Millionaire" with your prime-time work on ABC?
This first go-round it's going to be incredibly tough to make everything work and everybody happy, but my willingness to make it work lets you know just how much I truly wanted to host "Millionaire." In my opinion this was a once-in-a-career opportunity and I wasn't going to let it pass. This summer, especially, I'll be flying back and forth between LA and Connecticut [where 'Millionaire' is taped] a lot — so if you see me on one of these flights and I'm passed out, please let me sleep 'cause I probably need the nap!

What do you feel you bring to the table re: hosting "Millionaire"?
I think my style of hosting is perfectly suited for "Millionaire." I'm not an over-the-top, excitable host. That's just not my style. What I think I do well, and hope to bring to the show, is my ability to listen, [to] pay attention to what's really happening. There aren't many shows as iconic as this. I'm honored to be at the helm.

All smiles: Britt Nilsson (left), Kaitlyn Bristowe and Chris Harrison on "The Bachelor" last month.Photo: ABC/Rick Rowell


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First look at ‘Empire’ star Terrence Howard in ‘Wayward Pines’

Terrence Howard as Lucious Lyon on "Empire."Photo: Michael Lavine/FOX

Here's an early peek at "Empire" star Terrence Howard in his upcoming role on the Fox miniseries "Wayward Pines," premiering May 14.

Howard has had one of the biggest comebacks of the current TV season. In January, he reestablished himself as a leading man in Fox's sensational, hip-hop soap opera "Empire."

As music mogul Lucious Lyon, Howard cut a debonair figure who kept his three sons — and ferocious ex-wife, Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) — guessing as to who would inherit his multi-million dollar record company.

Howard has a very different role in "Wayward Pines." As Sheriff Arnold Pope, he's charged with protecting the impressionable citizens of a bucolic Idaho town where everyone is required to be happy — while making sure that Secret Service agent Ethan Burke (Matt Dillon) doesn't make any progress with his investigation into the fate of two federal agents.

When Burke tries to leave town, Pope pulls him over and shines a flashlight into his eyes.

"How do I get out of here?" Burke asks.

"You don't," Pope replies tersely.

In addition to Dillon, Howard's co-stars include Carla Gugino, Juliette Lewis and Melissa Leo.


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Conan’s Cuba trip nets 4 million viewers since March airdate

Give that man a cigar.

Conan O'Brien has gotten a lot of mileage out of his secret visit to Havana.

Nearly 4 million viewers have watched "Conan in Cuba" since it first aired on O'Brien's late-night show, "Conan," on March 5.

That broadcast snared 1.5 million viewers.

Since then, fans have tuned in on various platforms including DVR, repeats on sister networks HLN and truTV and on the TBS Web site and app.

"Conan in Cuba" is now the most-watched on-location special in the history of "Conan," which premiered on TBS in November 2010.


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Americans trapped in Yeman sue US for not rescuing them

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 15 April 2015 | 10.46

A Queens mom of four and a pregnant woman from Brooklyn are among of a group of New Yorkers suing the US government for not rescuing them from Yemen.

Mom Haleema Ahmed and expectant mom Saffa Abdul Eltaieb — as well as Brooklynites Saleh Mothana, Esma Almontaser and Mohammed Omer — are trapped in the war-torn country and a federal suit has been filed on their behalf in Washington, DC, saying the State Department and Defense Department failed to protect them by not issuing evacuation orders to bring them home.

"Quite frankly, it's an embarrassment that we have the largest military and we're unable to evacuate our own citizens," said Abed Ayoub, legal and policy director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, which filed the suit with the Council on America-Islamic Relations.

More than 700 Americans have registered with stuckinyemen.com, a Web site created by the ADC and CAIR, according to Ayoub.

A US official told The Post that Americans have been given fair warning to steer clear of Yemen, which has been under siege by Saudi-led and US-backed airstrikes against rebels who have seized parts of the country.


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Mitre Sports says stitching holes shown in HBO doc were ‘enlarged’

Mitre Sports International, the 198-year British sporting goods manufacturer, knows what its balls look like — and the soccer balls shown in a 2008 HBO show are definitely not their balls.

The holes are too big, lawyers for the company told a federal judge Tuesday.

Mitre, which is suing HBO for libel, and its legal team believe producers for the HBO show "Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel" enlarged the holes used for stitching the soccer balls to make it easier for the children to sew them.

Mitre claims HBO staged the event to falsely portray the company as abusing child labor laws.

The company claims it doesn't use child labor and that the HBO report was wrong.

The evidence was the enlarged holes — and they wanted to call an expert witness to testify about Mitre's balls.

But Judge George Daniels objected because the legal team was unable to call an expert on the size of the holes.

The exchange provided a few light moments in an otherwise serious trial.

At one point, the give-and-take between the judge and the lawyers about balls and holes in balls turned to blue balls.

Judge Daniels joked that without an expert witness, Mitre's claims were "pure speculation."

The judge said the claims only made sense if Mitre's legal team was trying to suggest the ball shown was brown and that Mitre only sells blue balls.

The conversation then got weirder as the judge suggested Mitre's lawyers ought to "bring in an expert on blue balls" if that was their argument.


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How Islanders past legends motivate captain John Tavares

John Tavares was born in 1990, nearly a decade after the Islanders Stanley Cup run ended.

Yet the Islanders captain has played at the Coliseum long enough to know what those teams did and he has tried to use that to his advantage as many former players visited the building during the building's final season.

"The respect I have for those guys is very high," Tavares said after Tuesday's practice before the team traveled to Washington for Wednesday's Game 1 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals against the Capitals. "You make sure you take the time to talk to them about what it was like. It was a different era and times, but you can definitely learn from what they have to say about what it took to achieve that."

One of the former players he stopped was Denis Potvin.

"Obviously, with him being the captain, you want to find out firsthand what kind of leader he was," Tavares said. "And Butch [Goring] is around. You see their pictures with the Cup all over the place in here, so it's hard not to think about what those teams meant to this league and these fans."

The upcoming playoff series against Washington will be just the second of Tavares' career. He set career highs this season in goals (38) and points (86), but his focus is elsewhere now.

He would like to make his first postseason run. And while he thinks the Isles are ready to finally make some headway in the postseason, Tavares also understands their words don't mean much.

"We believe that we are [ready], but we've got to go out there and do it," Tavares said. "We obviously want to win the series. But we're thinking about one game at a time. It's just about trying to focus on that. We believe in our team and we believe we can beat anybody."

Not everyone agrees, a fact not lost on coach Jack Capuano.

"Everyone is picking Washington," Capuano said. "I like being the underdog. I'll stress it a little bit. … For us, we might be the underdog, but I'm stressing how good of a team we are."

The islanders will find out soon enough whose expectations are correct.

In the meantime, Kyle Okposo isn't buying the narrative.

"We had the same exact number of points as they did, so I don't see why we're the underdogs," said Okposo, who added the team wasn't satisfied just making the playoffs. "We had a pretty successful year and want to carry that into the playoffs. We want to go deep, make a run and hoist that trophy at the end."

First, though, they have to beat the Caps. And if that's going to happen, Tavares likely will lead them.

"I think everyone is prepared for this time of year," Tavares said. "I don't think much needs to be said."

Against Pittsburgh two years ago, Tavares scored three goals and had a pair of assists in the six-game series. Capuano is confident Tavares can do even more this time around.

"I think you learn from experience," Capuano said. "Obviously, as captain you need to lead on the ice and off the ice and that's what he does."

Tavares said he hopes to recreate at least some of the success the Islanders had three decades ago.

"Those dynasty years, they were historic teams," Tavares said. "You appreciate that, admire it and strive for it. It would be unbelievable to win a Stanley Cup, let alone four in a row. You look around here and dream of doing something like that."


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$11K fine for posting ads on public property ruled unconstitutional

The city's $11,000 fine on a Manhattan baby sitter making $9,000 a year for posting advertisements on public property was "unconstitutionally excessive," a judge has ruled.

Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Paul Wooten said in a decision made public Tuesday that the 2011 fine imposed on Washington Heights resident Yasmin Pujols, 45, is "grossly disproportional to the gravity of [her] offense."

James Bernard, attorney for the Dominican immigrant, said the ruling "does justice for a woman who was just trying to earn a living in difficult economic times."

The city Law Department said it is reviewing the ruling.


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Yanks not good enough to overcome lack of clutch hits, shoddy ‘D’

BALTIMORE — The 2015 Yankees don't figure to do the big things particularly well — the "big things" in this context meaning "score runs" and "prevent runs."

So if Joe Girardi's guys want to be more than a transitional vehicle, they'll have to excel at the little things. That means not giving extra outs to their opponents. It means capitalizing on the few scoring opportunities they create.

It means, in the bigger picture, winning most of their close games. And it means that losses like Tuesday's, 4-3 to the Orioles at Camden Yards, sting all the more.

The Yankees fell to 2-2 in one-run games this season — and 3-5 overall, giving them sole residency in the American League East cellar — primarily because they went 1-for-8 (plus a walk) with runners in scoring position, an arena in which they had been faring better lately. And losing pitcher CC Sabathia continued his odd, years-long trend of putting up a stellar strikeouts-to-walks ratio (7-1) and still giving up too many runs (four); he hurt his cause with an error, and shortstop Didi Gregorius added a miscue, giving the Yankees a startling 11 errors for the season.

It came together as the sort of game a better club could shrug off, as O's starter Miguel Gonzalez set a career high with 10 strikeouts.

"He wasn't making any mistakes," Mark Teixeira, whose sixth-inning, two-out, RBI double represented the Yankees' one clutch hit, said of Gonzalez. "He's got five pitches. Not many guys have five pitches. When he was missing, he was missing out of the zone. He pitched really well. You've got to give him credit."

Brian McCann twice made the third out, on groundouts in the sixth and eighth, with Teixeira on second; the latter time, Teixeira represented the tying run.
Teixeira added of the Baltimore right-hander, "It's not like he needed to get out of too many jams, but he did when he needed to."

Actually, Gonzalez gave the Yankees more opportunities than Sabathia did to Baltimore.

Nevertheless, the Orioles cashed in on enough of their chances, going 1-for-5 with two sacrifice flies when they put runners in scoring position.

The Yankees now own a .246/.320/.443 slash line in 75 plate appearances with runners in scoring position, which is better than their overall .225/.302/.398. So on the bright side, at least Yankees fans can't complain about the team's lack of clutch hitting, which usually evolves into a criticism of the team's heart and guts. This club just isn't very good, period.

The Yankees' fielding incompetence didn't directly hurt them on Tuesday, yet it did prolong Sabathia's pitch count, never a good thing, as the Orioles slowly ran up their lead.

Sabathia himself struggled to catch up to Caleb Joseph's second-inning swinging bunt on the first-base side of the mound and underhanded a poor throw; a more sympathetic official scorer might have given Joseph an infield hit, but Sabathia's lack of mobility stood out regardless. The same went earlier in the second when Sabathia allowed a Chris Davis grounder to first and couldn't make it over to the bag, turning a potential 3-6-1 double play into just a 3-6 force.

Girardi covered for his pitcher with the surgically repaired knee, nothing that Sabathia falls off to his right after he throws a pitch and, besides, "He's a big man."

Sabathia, who rarely minces words when assessing his performance, blamed his lack of mobility on being "34 years old. Four years ago, I could've made that play," he said, referring to the Joseph play. Gregorius muffed a Delmon Young grounder in the sixth, the ball falling out of his hand on the transfer out of his glove.

"I think his luck is going to change," Girardi said of Sabathia.

It pretty much has to in order for the Yankees to beat the odds and overcome their big flaws with small victories.


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