He won Oscars for producing three best picture winners -- "One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest," "Amadeus" and "The English Patient" -- after a great career with Fantasy Records and feuds with John Fogerty. - Hollywood Reporter
Entrepreneur won three best picture Oscars - Variety
Lord of the Rings and Cuckoo's Nest Producer Saul Zaentz Dies Won three Best Picture Academy Awards.
Audrey Hepburn presenting producers Saul Zaentz and Michael Douglas the Oscar® for Best Picture for "One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest" at the 48th Academy Awards® in 1976. Introduced by Gene Kelly.
It's true what they say: good things come in threes. @sfmta_muni @munidiaries @LookingHBO pic.twitter.com/ib8Iu79dFo
— SF Film Commission (@Film_SF) December 31, 2013
“Scene In San Francisco”: Film Rebate Program Is Bringing In Big Returns
Data re San Francisco film rebate program: http://sfcontroller.org/Modules/ShowDocument.aspx?documentid=4981 … Production is up, and so are the $ productions are spending locally.
San Francisco’s Film Rebate Program Attracting Both TV And Movie Production
HBO Had The Most Pirated Show Of 2013 – Here's Why It's Thrilled
Producers Guild Nominations: ‘Wolf of Wall Street,’ ‘Blue Jasmine’ Make the Cut
'Blue Jasmine,' 'Nebraska' gain Writers Guild bids
Five reasons why Cate Blanchett has Best Actress Oscar in the (designer) bag
Cate Blanchett's Oscar prospects rising
Cate Blanchett gets SAG best actress nomination for Blue Jasmine
Oscar-Worthy: Sally Hawkins Gets Another Go-Round with Woody Allen
How Louis C. K. watches movies - Comedians in Cars getting Coffee
Haskell Wexler made a Documentary about long hours in the film business WHO NEEDS SLEEP?
WHO NEEDS SLEEP? from IMAGO - CINEMATOGRAPHERS on Vimeo.
Joseph Birdsong: Remember when I tricked Russell Tovey into hating on my state
Theater - Bulgari Hosts San Francisco Ballet Opening Night Gala Launch Party
S.F. Opera Exported to Europe, Heard on Radio Here
Affordable Care Act - Jan. 1 marks a new day for U.S. health care
Only in San Francisco - "All the blue-footed boobies we saw were young birds," Tietz said. "If there was not enough food in their wintering grounds to sustain all the birds, the adults would hold tight and force out the younger birds to search out food farther afield." - Jim Tietz, the Farallon Islands program biologist for Point Blue Conservation Science, formerly the Point Reyes Bird Observatory.
Weird animals drawn to California in 2013
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